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Elisabeth Fritzl Was Lured into a Basement By Her Dad and Trapped for 24 Years. Inside the Horrifying Case That Inspired 'Room' — and How She Pulled Off Her Escape

Elisabeth Fritzl Was Lured into a Basement By Her Dad and Trapped for 24 Years. Inside the Horrifying Case That Inspired 'Room' — and How She Pulled Off Her Escape

Yahoo01-03-2025

Elisabeth Fritzl was held captive in a basement and sexually abused by her father, Josef Fritzl, for 24 years — and had seven of his children.
Years before the abduction, Josef remodeled the basement of their family house in Austria, where he eventually lured and imprisoned Elisabeth. When she disappeared, he claimed that she ran away from home, convincing even his wife, Elisabeth's mother Rosemarie, that she left willingly to join a cult.
Josef and Rosemarie raised three of Elisabeth's children, who Josef pretended Elisabeth left on their doorstep, while Elisabeth was forced to raise three of her children in a locked underground compound without windows.
She and seven of her children survived 8,516 days in captivity, according to The Belfast Telegraph, with some never seeing sunlight until they were adults. The case and its media attention were part of the inspiration for the 2010 novel Room and the film of the same name released five years later.
Since escaping, Elisabeth has kept a deliberately low profile. Here's everything to know about where Elisabeth Fritzl and her children are now.
Elisabeth was born on April 6, 1966, and raised in her family's home in Amstetten, Austria. When she was 11 years old, Josef started sexually abusing her, according to The Guardian.
Josef began drawing up plans to build his extended cellar around 1981 or 1982. He equipped the space with electricity, made it soundproof and installed a toilet, sink, stove and refrigerator, as well as a bed.
In 1984, he asked a then-18-year-old Elisabeth to help him hang the final door in the cellar, Sky News reported. During the process, Josef held an ether-soaked cloth to her face until she was unconscious and then moved her into the cellar, where she'd be trapped for 24 years.
Josef physically, mentally and sexually abused Elisabeth almost daily starting on the second day of her captivity. He told everyone that she had run away to join a cult and forced her write letters to support his story. Elisabeth was alone, save for Josef's abuse, for the first five years of captivity, per The Guardian.
During her 24 years of imprisonment, Elisabeth gave birth to seven of her father's children. Josef took three of the kids (Lisa, Monika and Alexander) to live with him and Rosemarie, staging three incidents in which a baby would be left on their doorstep with notes from Elisabeth asking for Josef and Rosemarie to care for them.
Meanwhile, three other children (Kerstin, Stefan and Felix) remained locked in the cellar with Elisabeth. A twin boy named Michael died days after birth and Josef later admitted to incinerating the corpse.
Josef Fritzl had seven children with his daughter, Elisabeth. His crimes may not have been limited to his sexual, physical and mental abuse of Elisabeth though.
According to The Telegraph, he raped a 24-year-old woman at knifepoint in 1967 and was a suspect in the attempted sexual assault of a 21-year-old woman. He served one year of an 18-month sentence for the 1967 rape, with the crime getting expunged from his criminal record 15 years later.
The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Josef was also a suspect in four murders and several missing persons cases dating back nearly 50 years, including the sexual assault and murder of a 17-year-old girl who resembled Elisabeth.
Josef specifically designed the basement to make it nearly impossible for Elisabeth to escape from it or for anyone nearby to hear her if she screamed for help. He came up with a makeshift security system and ensured the cellar was soundproof.
"I brought in a heavy door of steel and concrete and equipped it with a remote-controlled electrical motor, which would open it only after a numeric code was entered," he told Austrian prosecutors (via The Guardian).
Sky News reported that Josef told Elisabeth and their children that if they tried to escape, they'd be electrocuted or that poison would be released into the cellar, killing them.
Josef claimed that he initially locked Elisabeth in the cellar because she was smoking, drinking and not adhering to his and Rosemarie's household rules. But the longer Elisabeth was locked away, the more difficult it became for him to consider letting her out.
"With every passing week in which I kept my daughter captive my situation was getting crazier," he said. "I was afraid of being arrested and of having my family and everyone out there find out about my crime — and so I postponed my decision again and again. Until one day it was really too late to free Elisabeth and take her upstairs."
According to Josef, his sexual abuse of Elisabeth began when she was in the basement after his feelings intensified over time.
"I knew that I was hurting her. But the urge to finally be able to taste the forbidden fruit was too strong. It was like an addiction," he told officials.
Rosemarie reportedly didn't know Elisabeth was locked in the cellar, and neither did anyone else.
"The cellar of my house belonged to me and to me alone, it was my kingdom to which only I had access to," Josef told Austrian prosecutors, per The Guardian.
He continued, "Everyone who lived there knew that. My wife, my children, my lodgers. And no one would have dared to enter my realm or even to ask me what I was doing there."
Authorities told The Sydney Morning Herald that they believed Rosemarie was oblivious to Josef's crimes against Elisabeth and the children, but that she did know about his 1967 rape conviction and took him back after he was released from prison.
Josef was reportedly also physically abusive to Rosemarie and to their son, Harald.
During his conversation with Austrian prosecutors, Josef noted that in case of his death, he had a timer set so that if he ever didn't unlock and enter the cellar for a certain length of time, it would unlock and she could be free. But there was an unexpected turn of events when Elisabeth's daughter, Kerstin, then 19, became ill.
On April 19, 2008, Elisabeth convinced Josef to bring Kerstin to a hospital for medical treatment. Once there, Josef gave Kerstin's care team a note to demonstrate that Elisabeth was Kerstin's mother who was away in a cult. Doctors made a televised appeal to Kerstin's missing mother to come forward and provide information about Kerstin's medical history, The New York Times reported.
Elisabeth, who had a television in the cellar, saw the TV report and convinced Josef to release her and the two other children, sons Felix and Stefan, who were still imprisoned in the cellar with her.
On April 26, 2008, Elisabeth visited Kerstin at the hospital with Josef after she was freed, at which point Josef was arrested on suspicion of sexual abuse. Police questioned Elisabeth about what she endured, but she wouldn't cooperate unless they promised her that she'd never have to see her father again.
Josef was charged with coercion, deprivation of liberty, incest, rape and enslavement of Elisabeth, as well as the murder of newborn Michael by negligence for not getting him medical attention, the BBC reported.
He initially pleaded guilty to all charges except enslavement and murder but after a few days of his criminal trial, pleaded guilty to all charges.
The New York Times reported that Michael's negligent death carried the highest sentence and prosecutors demanded the maximum time for Josef. On March 19, 2009, a then-73-year-old Josef was sentenced to life in prison.
Elisabeth changed her name after her father's trial, The Mirror reported in January 2024. Austrian law prevents news outlets from revealing her identity.
She lives in a rural Austrian town known only to the public as "Village X" with her six surviving children and her partner, Thomas Wagner, a bodyguard who was hired to protect the family.
A member of her care team told the outlet that she continues to work toward moving past her trauma and have some semblance of normalcy.
"With the approval of her doctors she has ceased psychiatric therapies while she gets on with her life — learning to drive, helping her children with their homework, making friends with people in her locality," they said. "She lost the best years of her life in that cellar; she is determined that every day remaining to her will be filled with activity."
Elisabeth was forced to give birth to seven children in the cellar without medical help, which included Kerstin, Stefan, Felix, Lisa, Monika, Alexander and the late Michael.
Elisabeth's six surviving children were reunited after Josef's crimes were discovered but it took time to adjust.
The Independent reported that the kids (Lisa, Monika, Alexander) who grew up with Josef and Rosemarie felt guilt for living relatively normal lives, while the other three (Kerstin, Stefan, Felix) struggled to bond as they learned about the outside world for the first time.
Eight years later, Kerstin was in a serious relationship and Stefan reportedly had ambitions to be a merchant ship captain, per The Belfast Telegraph. Felix was also a relatively well-adjusted child who enjoyed PlayStation games and attended school.
Elisabeth's children are now adults, ranging in age from 21 to 36, and live with her in a remote Austrian village.
One local told The Mirror, "Given what they have been through, they are very polite, happy and smile a lot."
In a May 2023 interview, Josef told The Sun that he expressed different hopes, including wanting to reunite with his family and reconcile with his ex-wife, Rosemarie, who divorced him in 2012.
"I do understand people who want me to die in jail. But I want to experience freedom one day. I've never been afraid of dying," he said.
A year later, in May 2024, Josef was approved for a transfer from a psychiatric prison to a regular prison, Reuters reported. In a statement from the court, it was declared that Josef no longer posed a threat that required him to be in the "forensic therapeutic centre," citing his dementia diagnosis and physical frailty.
In the Austrian correctional system, transfers like these are typical before prisoners are granted conditional release, which Josef's attorney said she'd seek for him. However, the court also noted that it's unlikely he'd ever be released from prison because of "special preventive reasons."
If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, please contact the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673) or go to rainn.org.
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