Josef Fritzl 'Close To Death' A Decade After Being Jailed For Imprisoning And Raping Daughter

Elisabeth Fritzl and her children were freed after 24 years and 3,000 sexual assaults.
Josef Fritzl is reportedly suffering from dementia and has 'resigned himself to dying'
Josef Fritzl is reportedly suffering from dementia and has 'resigned himself to dying'
Rex Features

An Austrian man who kept his own daughter prisoner in a warren of soundproofed rooms beneath his home and repeatedly raped her is reportedly close to death.

Josef Fritzl was jailed for life a decade ago and now a fellow prisoner has claimed the 84-year-old is suffering from dementia and has “resigned himself to dying.”

The unnamed source, who like Frizl is behind bars in Austria’s Krems-Stein prison, told Austrian newspaper OE24: “He has totally withdrawn and barely leaves his cell. He doesn’t want contact with others and all together it looks as though he has resigned himself to dying.”

It’s understood Fritzl, who changed his surname to Mayrhoff in a bid to avoid recognition by his fellow prisoners, used to work in the prison library but has given that up due to his condition.

Elisabeth Fritzl as a teenager, before her ordeal at her father's hands
Elisabeth Fritzl as a teenager, before her ordeal at her father's hands
Rex Features

Fritzl incarcerated his daughter Elisabeth in the cellar under their Amstetten home when she was just 18. Already a convicted rapist, he went on to father seven children with her, until his monstrous behaviour was eventually uncovered by the police.

In March 2009, Fritzl was jailed for life. Initially he denied all charges, including rape, incest, murder by neglect and enslavement. But on the third day he changed his pleas to guilty, claiming that watching video testimony from Elisabeth (who refused to face him in court) made him change his mind.

After 15 years in prison, Fritzl could theoretically apply for parole, but after his sentence was passed, his lawyers said he expected to spend the rest of his life behind bars.

An aerial view of the Fritzl house in Amstetten, under which Elisabeth and her children were kept prisoner for 24 years
An aerial view of the Fritzl house in Amstetten, under which Elisabeth and her children were kept prisoner for 24 years
Rex Features

In 2010 he gave an interview from prison to German newspaper Bild, in which he described growing tomatoes and peppers in his cell, watching comedies on TV and told how he was convinced his wife still loved him.

A former electrician, Fritzl was married to Rosemarie, with whom he had two sons and five daughters, including Elisabeth, who was born in 1966.

Records show Fritzl served prison time for rape and had convictions for attempted rape and indecent exposure. He also worked as a landlord and ran a pub and a campsite. He is believed to have started sexually abusing Elisabeth when she was just 11.

Elisabeth had threatened to run away many times and indeed had been brought back home by the police or Fritzl himself more than once. When her absence was noticed in August 1984, he told friends and family she had run off to join a religious sect.

Elisabeth was banished to the cold, damp, rat-infested basement, where a total of eight doors would have to be opened before reaching the purpose-built cellar that was to become her home.

At first, Fritzl shackled his daughter with an iron chain that held her arms hoisted behind her back, allowing her to move just half a metre from either side of her bed.

Throughout her imprisonment she was told if she tried to overpower him, the dungeon would be pumped with poisonous gas and she – and the seven children she would later give birth to alone, and without help or pain relief – would die underground.

Frizl covering his face during his trial in 2009
Frizl covering his face during his trial in 2009
Ho New / Reuters

Around nine months into her imprisonment he removed the chain because it was “hindering his sexual activity with his daughter” according to the indictment.

It was to be 24 years from the day her incarceration began until Elisabeth would finally be free again.

On 19 April 2008, in a rare show of mercy, Fritzl drove his 19-year-old daughter Kerstin to hospital after she grew gravely ill in the cellar. Unbeknownst to him, Elisabeth had slipped a secret note into her daughter’s pocket, begging for help.

As the teenager lay close to death in intensive care, suffering from breathing problems and a kidney disorder, her doctors put out a clever TV appeal for her mother to come forward. Fritzl responded by escorting Elisabeth to the hospital, where he was eventually arrested.

During her imprisonment, Fritzl raped his daughter at least 3,000 times, resulting in seven children. Three of the children – Kerstin, Stefan and Felix – were to stay underground and did not see daylight until their release in April 2008.

The bathroom in the dungeon where Elisabeth and her children were forced to live
The bathroom in the dungeon where Elisabeth and her children were forced to live
Rex Features

A further three appeared at the family’s front door in a ploy by Fritzl. He told his wife and the community they had been abandoned by Elisabeth, who was still living with her sect. He went on to successfully adopt one of them and officially foster the other two.

The seventh child, a twin named Michael, died shortly after his birth in the basement in 1996. The child had breathing difficulties and died in his mother’s arms when he was around 60 hours old. Fritzl burned his body in an incinerator.

When Elisabeth arrived at the hospital where Kerstin was being treated, she was described by Dr Guntram Knecht as “destroyed by all means.” An account in the Guardian said: “At the age of only 42, her crudely cut hair is completely white, her lips are shrunken around toothless gums, her face is deeply lined, her body painfully thin, her skin almost transparent.”

Elisabeth and her children were given new identities. Immediately after their release, they were admitted to a psychiatric clinic in which a special dark enclosure was built for them as they began the long process of readjusting to life on the outside.

The hallway to the children's bedroom
The hallway to the children's bedroom
Rex Features

In 2010, Fritzl’s sister-in-law, a woman who identifies herself as Christine R, told The Independent about Elisabeth’s life after leaving the clinic to live with her children in secret, secured accommodation.

She said: “Elisabeth likes to go shopping a lot. She couldn’t do that while she was locked in the cellar for those 24 years. She loves jeans with glitter pockets and she passed her driving test without difficulty. Now she’s looking for a car. The kids are all going to school and working hard. Felix, the smallest one, has got a PlayStation.”

Neither Elisabeth nor her children have been photographed or given interviews since their release and in 2013 the cellar where they were held prisoners was filled with concrete, to ensure it would never be entered again.

Willibald Reitner was the first police officer to speak to Elisabeth after she was freed. He revealed: “I don’t have personal contact with Elisabeth and her children. However, every year at Christmas, New Year and Easter I get a text, wishing me all the best.”

Rape Crisis services for women and girls who have been raped or have experienced sexual violence - 0808 802 9999

Survivors UK offers support for men and boys - 0203 598 3898

Close

What's Hot