More questions than answers in Austria incest case

Thu May 1, 2008 3:12pm EDT
 
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By Karin Strohecker

VIENNA (Reuters) - Watching the gruesome details of the Austrian incest case unfold, one question is on many people's minds: "How could this be allowed to happen?"

The plight of Elisabeth Fritzl, who was held by her own father for 24 years in a windowless prison and bore him 7 children, has set a new standard for criminal depravity in postwar Austria following the case of Natascha Kampusch, who escaped in 2006 after being held for eight years in a basement.

While the Kampusch case was widely regarded as the exceptional crime of a twisted loner, Austrians are now faced with a case even more unfathomable within less than two years.

Hours after the case came to light in the town of Amstetten, officials, police and even the victims' lawyer lined up to say that no one but the suspect could possibly be at fault; Josef Fritzl, now 73, had simply outsmarted them all.

In his first public reaction, Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer expressed great concern for the victims and quickly announced a campaign to repair Austria's image abroad.

Much to the surprise of international media and anger of welfare charities, there seems to be little effort to investigate the circumstances that might have allowed the crime to go unnoticed by neighbors and authorities alike.

"The story of Elisabeth F. shows that unanswered questions and neglected inquiries made it possible for the father to continue his abuse," said Hedwig Woelfl, head of research at the Austrian child protection charity Moewe. "The aid network failed in terms of bringing the information together."

Elisabeth's disappearance should have been a clear sign that something was wrong, but apparently nobody was interested in the teenage girl, and the family, the town, the authorities and the country itself did not ask enough questions, she said.

Many of the questions focus on how Fritzl could have been allowed to adopt one and foster another two of the children from his incestuous relationship.

Fritzl had been granted the adoption after pretending the child had been left on his doorstep by his missing daughter with a handwritten letter asking her parents to raise the child.

Judge Josef Schloegl, who in 1994 approved the adoption of the now 15-year-old girl, said that at the time he had not asked for Fritzl's police record.

"We had no reason to ask for it," Schloegl told Reuters on Tuesday. "I have three reports from the juvenile welfare office that the family is very lovingly caring for the little child, and that everything is fine ... It was the perfect case file."

Austrian media have reported that Fritzl had two previous convictions. Since non-capital offences are purged from criminal records in Austria after a maximum of 15 years, they could have lapsed before the adoption.

FRIDGE, FREEZER, WASHER

At a news conference on Wednesday, local official Hans-Heinz Lenze said authorities had asked for Fritzl's police record at the time, but found no offences against his name.  Continued...

 
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