Austrian Captor Had Prior Rape Conviction
Sister-In-Law Describes Man Who Abused His Imprisoned Daughter As A "Tyrant"
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Acquaintances of the Fritzl family are wondering how Josef Fritzl (inset) hid the imprisonment and incest of his daughter for so long. (AP)
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A photo taken by a forensic team shows the fortified underground prison in which Josef Fritzl allegedly kept his daughter for 24 years. (AP/Police Niederoesterreich)
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Play CBS Video Video Austrian Incest Dad Up Close Josef Fritzl, who confessed to holding his daughter captive for 24 years while raping and fathering six children with her, appears here in exclusive home video.
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Video Austrian Dad Admits Abuse Josef Fritzl has admitted to imprisoning his daughter for 24 years and fathering seven of her children. Allen Pizzey reports.
In an exclusive television interview for The Associated Press, the sister-in-law of the man accused of imprisoning his daughter in a cellar dungeon, repeatedly raping her and fathering her seven children, has provided the intimate details of the life of oppression inside the Fritzl home.
The woman, who asked only to be identified as Christine R. because of the wide attention the story has received, said incest victim Elisabeth ran away from home as a 17-year-old, about six months before police say she was locked into the soundproofed, windowless cellar beneath their apartment - hinting at a motive for the crime.
She described the father as a "tyrant" who instilled a culture of fear at home, which helped him create an elaborate cover story that no one questioned of Elisabeth running away to join a cult and abandoning three children on their doorstep.
"When he said it was black, it was black, even when it was 10 times white," said the woman, who was interviewed Saturday evening at her home in Austria. "He tolerated no dissent.
"Listen, if I myself was scared of him at a family party, and I did not feel confident to say anything in any form that could possibly offend him, then you can imagine how it must have been for a woman that spent so many years with him," she said.
If wife Rosemarie had challenged Fritzl, "we don't know what he would have done to her. Maybe he would have slapped her," the sister said.
Christine R. also painted the most complete picture to date of her sister: a woman who against all odds fought to hold together a troubled family, yet never suspected that the cause of so much pain was in her own home.
"She never believed him capable of it," the woman said of her 68-year-old sister. "We spoke about it often when we met. And I would say, 'Rosemarie, where can Elisabeth be?' I even told her myself, she is definitely in a cult where you can only have a certain amount of children, or they don't want sick children."
But why was the cult story so easily accepted? And did Rosemarie search for her missing daughter? Such questions have puzzled this Alpine nation, which has grappled with whether Rosemarie might have had knowledge of the crime.
Police say they have no evidence that Rosemarie was complicit in her husband's alleged atrocities. They say the 73-year-old electrician confessed to the imprisonment and rape and to incinerating the body of one of the children he had with his daughter after it died in infancy.
Josef is accused of concocting the cult story and even impersonating her in a phone call to convince his wife of its truth. He is also accused of forcing his daughter to write letters that were used to explain the three children apparently found at their doorstep.
"Every person that looked in his eyes was fooled by him," Christine R. said of her brother-in-law.
She said Rosemarie had no idea that her daughter was locked in the basement and did for a while frantically look for her elsewhere. The sister, 12 years her junior, remembered herself searching for Elisabeth in train stations and where homeless people hang out.
"But where can you find out where these cults are?" the woman asked. "We really did detective work all around as to where the cult could be."
Christine R. said her sister devoted her life to her children - a task that she focused on with even greater effort after her husband was jailed. "I believe he spent a year and half in prison," she said.
She did not have more information on the rape conviction.
The Oberoesterreichische Nachrichten daily on Saturday printed an excerpt (in German) of what it said was a 1967 court record found in the state archives in Linz, in which a Josef F. was accused of breaking into the apartment of a 24-year-old nurse and raping her.
Police have declined to comment, saying records that old would have been erased under Austria's statutes of limitation. But authorities are awaiting old court records that the media say document the case.
Every person that looked in his eyes was fooled by him.
Christine R., sister-in-law of Josef Fritzl"I think this changed their relationship a little," Christine R. said. "You can surely imagine that a woman in such a situation would have been utterly broken and shocked over something like this."
As time went on, the relationship between Fritzl and his wife soured, and "there were some things she had to swallow, curses and so on," said the sister.
Still, there were no warning signs that something was disturbing about the relationship between the father and Elisabeth, whom police say may have been sexually abused when she was as young as 12.
"He was just as strict with her as he was to every other child," Christine R. said. "There was nothing in particular that could lead you to say he was more intimate with her. From the child as well it never came out. She never confided in anyone."
Authorities first began to unravel the complex story on April 19, when Elisabeth's eldest daughter was admitted to a hospital suffering from an unidentified infection.
Doctors, unable to find any medical records for the girl, appealed on TV for her mother to come forward. Fritzl then accompanied Elisabeth to the hospital April 26 and opened up to police.
Fritzl has not been formally charged. He faces up to 15 years in prison if he is ultimately convicted on rape charges, the most grave of his alleged offenses, unless prosecutors can charge him with "murder through failure to act" in connection with the death of the infant. That is punishable by up to 20 years in prison.
Christine R. said she last spoke to her sister "four or five days" after the daughter's admission to the hospital, which would mean about a day or two before Fritzl's arrest. She said she has received updates on the condition of her sister and Elisabeth from a "good source."
"My sister is apparently doing very badly and Elisabeth is not in the best shape either," she said. "I know my sister and when something is wrong with her children the world collapses.
"For sure, the world has collapsed for her."
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





we really all love CBS
Old Washer Woman (***) I just love it when modern 21 century Journalist feel compeld to edit the Webster Dictionary
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FuzzyBear... Wow. You should spin for the Bush administration.
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Posted by lambofgoth at 06:57 AM : May 05, 2008
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Finally some response from the Academic community,
it really is hard to get a discussion going about rascism and race in the U.S. these days.
Now many would find a discussion about race as being a strange place to start , considering the News Topic at hand but we can see that alot of the pioneering work of common genetics came out of a concern for Match Making.
so lets begin our discussion
The idea of Inbreeding began with the Egyptian Pharoahs nearly 3000 years ago and has been practised mostly throughout history.
For example the current British monarchy is a long line of careful inbreeding (Blue Blood), which until the present generation, where the Fairy Tale Princess (Di) ,was replaced with an old washer woman (***), by the next King of England, now you have to admit this is liberal thinking that has crept into the
monarchy.
Now it is hard to image that the Kentucky Derby community would allow '''' Big Brown '''' to be bred with a common plow horse, but such is the the thinking of the Kennedy Fellowship of the Hawvard University Biology Department.
lets see where is this leading ?
some how I have to get from Malcom X, Lewis Faricon, and connect it with Barack Obama
I`m working on it
Sincerely Fuzzy Bear
Think about what you wrote, if you have the brains to think that deep.
Well what a sad story,
Fritz is still trying to hold on to the old Nazi phylosiphy of a master race, he didn`t want his genes getting mixed up with the inferiors, like is so common in the United States. that really is cold hard German thinking, not practical since you need to have so much common gene mixing to keep the mongolian traits from surfacing, and then his daughter what a life why didn''t he think about what he was doing to his daughter.
but you can see how years of Nazi indoctrination can make a person do strange things so maybe Fritz was trying to hold on to the Fuerher and the Father Land,
actually he should have let his Daughter date an East German from the Rhineland,
Yes I guess every good German Vather doesn''t want to see his daughter marry the inferiors, that is understandable. but Fritz this was extreme in the worst case. yes, well, Match making should still be the Norm for the Master Race. I would encourange Match Making, parents selecting the childrens mates.
sincerely Fuzzy Bear
- by swwils May 4, 2008 11:31 AM EDT
- I have seen,and heard of some pretty sick things on this planet in my 46 yrs,but this eats all the cake!I am mind boggled on how this guy got away with this for so long.Also how did his wife not know,he must really be a dictator or worse.Those children are ruined,that close of incest creates crazy people.He should be shot for destroying the lives of8 people including his wife.Sicko!!!
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