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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Kate Connolly in Berlin

Josef Fritzl applies for release from prison into nursing home

Josef Fritzl in 2008.
Josef Fritzl in 2008. His lawyer said that a recent psychiatric report ruled that he no longer posed a threat to society. Photograph: Anonymous/AP

Josef Fritzl, the Austrian man who raped and incarcerated his daughter in a purpose-built prison beneath his home for 24 years, is applying for release from jail, according to his lawyer.

Fritzl, 88, could be moved to a nursing home, if his lawyer, Astrid Wagner, is successful in her appeal on his behalf.

The electrical engineer was sentenced to life imprisonment in 2009 for the rape, incest and incarceration of his daughter, Elisabeth, and the seven children she had with him, one of whom was deemed by the court to have been killed by Fritzl, after he failed to get medical help for the child.

Wagner said that a recent psychiatric report on Fritzl ruled that he no longer posed a threat to society. A court could decide to move him to a normal prison. But Wagner said that Fritzl, who has dementia, should be allowed to spend his remaining days in a care home. She has said she has applied for his conditional discharge.

The case came to light in 2008, when Elisabeth Fritzl managed to communicate with the police that he was holding her captive. Then 42, she said he had been held underground for 24 years and that previous to that, he had abused her from the age of 11.

Fritzl lured her into the cellar, built in the style of a cold war bunker sometimes found in Austrian homes, when she was 18. He told his wife and family acquaintances that she had run away to join a cult.

His crimes were first revealed when a child of Elisabeth’s became critically ill and he took them to hospital, where authorities appealed for their mother to come forward. He released her from the prison to present herself to them and she managed to communicate to them her situation.

Fritzl is being held in a high security unit for mentally disturbed patients in Stein prison in Krems, north-east Austria, not far from his former home of Amstetten.

Under Austrian law, prisoners are potentially eligible for conditional release after 15 years – in Fritzl’s case this would be 2023.

The Austrian media court psychiatrist Heidi Kastner, who in 2009 described Fritzl as “extremely psychologically abnormal” and “emotionally illiterate” has come to the conclusion in a 28-page report that he is no longer dangerous. She described him as suffering from dementia, physically frail and in need of a walking frame to move about.

Wagner, who has visited Fritzl in prison 40 times, and in 2022 wrote a book about him called The Abysses of Josef F, said, based on the report, she considered it legitimate to allow his release. “I would not be frightened of moving in with him in a flatshare arrangement, or to live alongside him in a care home. He no longer possesses a sex drive,” she said.

In an interview with the German tabloid Bild, she described how he spent his days watching television in his cell, sunning himself through the bars of his window, and exercising.

The regional court in Krems is expected to reach a decision in the coming weeks.

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