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Austrian man accused of holding daughter captive for years to remain in custody


An Austrian judge has ruled that a man accused of fathering seven children with a daughter he held captive for more than two decades should remain in custody, an official said.

The decision extends Josef Fritzl's pretrial detention by a month, St. Poelten provincial court spokesman Franz Cutka said. It was made during a routine, closed-door session required under Austrian law and will be re-evaluated in June.

Fritzl's lawyer, Rudolf Mayer, said he had expected Friday's ruling and did not object to it.

Fritzl, 73, was formally placed in confinement April 29. He had been detained three days earlier on suspicion of locking up his daughter Elisabeth for 24 years and fathering her seven children.

Authorities say Fritzl confessed to locking up his daughter and repeatedly raping her. Investigators say he also told them three of the children were raised in a cellar at his home in Amstetten, Austria, three others were brought up above ground, and one died in infancy. DNA tests have confirmed Fritzl is the biological father of the six surviving children.

He is expected to be charged once investigations are completed. In Amstetten, west of the capital Vienna, detectives continued to comb through the vast Fritzl property for evidence.

Chief investigator Franz Polzer said his team was making good progress, but it would likely still take some time before the entire property and its contents were thoroughly examined and analyzed.

"We have already come very far," he said.

Polzer said a yard search Thursday using sniffer dogs had not produced any results.

"We want to be absolutely sure ... this man exercised unbelievable violence," he said.

Fritzl's alleged double life began to fall apart when Elisabeth's oldest child, a 19-year-old woman, was hospitalized with a severe infection.

Unable to find medical records for the woman, doctors appealed for her mother to come forward. Fritzl accompanied Elisabeth to the hospital April 26 and was detained after she divulged what had allegedly happened to her.

In comments relayed through his lawyer and published in the Austrian magazine News on Thursday, Fritzl was quoted as saying he knew it was wrong to hold his daughter captive and that he "must have been crazy" for doing so. He added that he tried to care for her and their children as best as he could by taking them flowers, toys and books, according to the interview.

Copyright 2008 AP Features
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Author:VERONIKA OLEKSYN
Publication:AP Features
Date:May 10, 2008
Words:395
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