Experts: Austrian Captor Had Power Complex
Psychiatrists Say Other Disorders May Have Affected Man Who Kept Daughter In Cellar For 24 Years
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A photo taken by a forensic team and released by the Austrian police with permission of Austria's prosecution office on Monday, April 28, 2008 shows a view into a hidden room in a house in Amstetten, Austria, in which a woman is believed to have been held captive for 24 years. (AP/Police Niederoesterreich)
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A photo taken by and released by the Austrian police with permission of Austria's prosecution on Monday, April 28, 2008 shows suspect Josef F. at an unspecified location. (AP/Police Niederoesterreich)
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The outside of the house in Amstetten, Austria, where a 73-year-old man reportedly kept his daughter captive in the cellar for 24 years. DNA tests are being conducted to verify charges that he fathered several children by her. (AP Photo/Helmut Stamberg)
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Play CBS Video Video Pictures Of Daughter's Cell New pictures show the basement cell where an Austrian father allegedly imprisoned his daughter for 24 years. Charlie D'Agata reports.
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Video Austrian Held Daughter Captive An Austrian man imprisoned his daughter in a basement for 24 years, authorities say, and fathered 7 children with her. Allen Pizzey reports.
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Photo Essay Daughter Held Captive Austrian man accused of imprisoning his daughter for 24 years and fathering her seven children.
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Interactive Sexual Assault Facts and statistics on sexual assault and rape, with victim resources.
Josef Fritzl, 73, appears to have been driven by pronounced narcissism and a need to exercise power over others - and that may help explain how he got away with the abuse for so long - said Austrian psychiatrist Reinhard Haller.
"This man must have been insane and must have felt he was far superior to others," Haller said.
Court psychiatrist Sigrun Rossmanith said Fritzl essentially had two personalities: "the underground one, and the one that existed above."
"He was obviously a ruler. If the cellar was taboo for his wife and (other) children, and they heard that over and over, then they didn't dare to check on anything," she said. "If someone has power and forces it on someone else, then his word is like the word of God."
Police said Fritzl confessed Monday to holding captive his daughter - now 42 - sexually abusing her, fathering her children and tossing into a furnace the body of one child who died in infancy. He was to appear in court Tuesday.
Investigators say they believe his wife, with whom he had seven other children, was unaware that the daughter she believed ran away to join a religious cult in 1984 was living below her in the basement cell that Fritzl built beneath their apartment in Amstetten, 75 miles west of Vienna.
Authorities said the daughter, the children and Fritzl's wife were all getting counseling at an undisclosed location.
"He is really hit by this. He is very serious, but he is emotionally broken," Fritzl's lawyer, Rudolf Mayer, told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
Mayer said Fritzl also was under psychiatric care. Asked whether he showed any remorse, Mayer said only: "I cannot say at this point."
Austria is still scandalized by a 2006 case involving a girl who was kidnapped and imprisoned in a basement outside Vienna for more than eight years, and residents of this working-class town west of the capital were puzzled as to how the latest instance could go undetected.
Questions were being raised as to how Fritzl deceived neighbors, social workers and police for so long.
How is it possible that no one knew anything for 24 years?
Anita Fabian, teacherReintraud Weissenberger, who runs a pharmacy down the street from the Fritzl home, said Tuesday that Josef and his wife, Rosemarie, were clients.
But she said there was nothing strange in their purchasing patterns. She would not discuss any medication they might have bought.
Officials said Fritzl faces up to 15 years in prison if charged, tried and convicted on rape charges, the most grave of his alleged offenses under Austrian law.
Police released Fritzl's full name and photograph at a news conference Monday, after his identity was widely reported by media in Austria and elsewhere in Europe.
Fritzl was born in 1935 and was a young child when the Nazis annexed Austria before World War II.
His daughter Elisabeth was 18 when she was imprisoned in the cell constructed deep beneath the family's apartment in the building, said Franz Polzer, head of the Lower Austrian Bureau of Criminal Affairs.
"He admitted that he locked his daughter ... in the cellar, that he repeatedly had sex with her, and that he is the father of her seven children," Polzer told the AP.
According to police, Elisabeth said she gave birth to twins in 1996 but one died several days later.
Police said the surviving children are three boys and three girls, the youngest of whom is 5. The oldest child is 19. DNA tests were expected to determine whether Fritzl is the father of the children, as he claims.
Investigators said they were trying to determine how the victims could have been hidden away for so long from other families in the building and everyone else in the town of 23,000 people.
Fritzl "managed to deceive everyone," including his wife, who apparently was unaware of the existence of the children in the cellar, Polzer said.
Officials said three of the secret children - aged 19, 18 and 5 - "never saw sunlight" until they were freed a few days ago.
Polzer told reporters that Fritzl was an authoritarian who took care never to allow anyone near the cellar. Hans-Heinz Lenze, a senior local official, said experts were trying to figure out if anything could have been heard beyond the cell's padded, reinforced concrete walls.
Polzer said investigators believe Fritzl acted alone, but appealed to the public to come forward with information.
Elisabeth had been missing since 1984, and authorities said her father had concocted a cover story that she had joined a cult and disappeared. Police in Amstetten found her on Saturday evening after receiving a tip.
Police released several photos showing parts of the cramped basement cell, with a gaily decorated small bathroom and a narrow passageway leading to a tiny bedroom. Investigators said the keyless-entry system apparently kept the daughter from escaping.
Three of the children lived with the grandparents. Fritzl and his wife registered those children with authorities, saying that they had found them outside their home in 1993, 1994 and 1997, at least one with a note from Elisabeth saying she could not care for the child.
Authorities said the victims and Fritzl's wife were under psychiatric care in an undisclosed location.
Lenze said the 5-year-old, a boy, appeared "cheerful."
"Of course, they are very pale," he added.
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- Another question is, how many more cases like this are going on as we speak--not just in Austria, but in Europe and here and the rest of the world? Sadly a lot of men in America do the same things--but unless they live on ranches and hide behind religion when they do it, they often kill their victims to keep them from telling.
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