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"I'm no monster," incest dad tells newspaper
Wed, May 07, 2008
AFP

VIENNA, May 7, 2008 (AFP) - The man accused of imprisoning his daughter as a sex slave for 24 years said he was "no monster" but that no one would have known if he had killed all the children he forced her to bear, a newspaper reported Wednesday.

"I'm no monster," Joself Fritzl was quoted as saying by his lawyer to the tabloid daily Oesterreich.

Fritzl claimed credit for saving the life of his eldest daughter but added that he could have killed his daughter and all the children.

"I could have killed them all. Then there would have been no trace. No-one would have found me out."

In remarks transmitted by lawyer Rudolf Mayer to the newspaper, Fritzl, 73, said it was his act that saved the life of the eldest of the six surviving children born out of the sexual abuse.

Nineteen-year-old Kerstin, who was born in the cramped dungeon where Fritzl held his daughter prisoner, was rushed to hospital on April 19 with multiple organ failure, which the doctors suggest could be a result of her incarceration.

She has since been in an artificially-induced coma and put on a life-support machine.

It was Kerstin's hospitalisation that triggered the discovery of one of the world's most shocking cases of domestic abuse.

"If it weren't for me, Kerstin wouldn't be alive today," he said. "It was me who made sure she was taken to hospital."

Fritzl locked away his daughter Elisabeth, now 42, when she was just 18 and repeatedly raped her, forcing to bear seven children in all.

According to police, three of the children remained incarcerated with their mother, three more were legally adopted by Fritzl and taken to lead 'normal' lives as his 'grandchildren' in the family home upstairs. The seventh child died shortly after birth.

 

 
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