True crime news logo

Sign up for our newsletter and get the latest stories

Never miss the latest true crime news, reviews and top lists — plus new podcasts, series, films and books.

You can unsubscribe with one click from any email.

True crime news logo

The international true crime destination. Cases, documentaries, podcasts and travel routes.

© 2026 truecrime.news. All rights reserved.

Mørkeland podcast — episode 340 — The Josef Fritzl case in Austria
Podcast
•
March 17, 2026 at 12:58 PM

The Amstetten Horror: 24 Years in Josef Fritzl's Basement

How Austrian authorities missed signs of Europe's most notorious kidnapping case until 2008

Host
Susanne Sperling
Redaktør
Mørkeland
RadioPlay

In April 2008, Austrian police raided a family home at 40 Ybbstrasse in Amstetten, northern Lower Austria, uncovering one of Europe's most disturbing criminal cases. Josef Fritzl, then 73, had held his daughter Elisabeth captive in a reinforced, sound-proofed basement chamber for nearly a quarter-century—subjecting her to repeated rape and forcing her to give birth to seven children without medical assistance.

The nightmare began on 28 August 1984, when Fritzl lured his 18-year-old daughter into the cellar under the pretense of helping install a door. He drugged her, locked her inside, and never let her leave. To the outside world, Fritzl fabricated an explanation: he told police and family members that Elisabeth had run away to join a religious cult. He even forged a letter in her handwriting to support the lie. Elisabeth's 1983 attempt to escape home—when she ran away and was found by police in Vienna—had already marked her as troubled. This history made Fritzl's story more believable to authorities.

For 24 years, Elisabeth remained imprisoned. During this time, she was raped thousands of times and gave birth to seven children fathered by Fritzl himself. One infant died shortly after birth; Fritzl disposed of the body in an incinerator, resulting in a negligent homicide charge. Three of the surviving children—Lisa, Monika, and Alexander—were secretly brought upstairs by Fritzl and raised as foster children by his wife, Rosemarie, who lived above the dungeon apparently unaware of the captivity below. The other three children—Stefan, Felix, and Kerstin—remained imprisoned with their mother in the basement.

The case unraveled on 19 April 2008, when Fritzl took his critically ill 19-year-old daughter Kerstin to a hospital in Amstetten. Medical staff became suspicious when he attempted to control her treatment and information. A week later, on 26 April 2008, Fritzl allowed Elisabeth, Stefan, and Felix to leave the basement. Elisabeth immediately revealed the full extent of her ordeal to police. After assurances of safety, she disclosed everything: the imprisonment, the rape, the births, the years of psychological and physical abuse. Police raided the home and freed the remaining children.

The Austrian public was stunned. The case attracted international media attention and raised urgent questions about how such systematic abuse could occur undetected in a suburban family home.

Fritzl was charged with incest, rape, false imprisonment, enslavement, coercion, and negligent homicide. At trial in Sankt Pölten in March 2009, he initially pleaded not guilty to some charges before changing his plea. On 19 March 2009, he was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole eligibility for 15 years. The verdict included sentences for murder by neglect, 20 years for enslavement, 15 years for rape, 10 years for deprivation of liberty, 5 years for coercion, and 1 year for incest.

Austria
Josef Fritzl
Camilla Bjerregaard Aurvig
Kristine Sofie Bugbee
Josef Fritzl case
Amstetten
1984-2008
Josef Fritzl case — imprisonment
Criminal Women
missing persons
International murder cases
murder-without-borders
historic poisoning case
Poison murder
cold cases
unsolved mysteries
historical murders
Murder of young mother
serial murder
Murder by the Baltic Sea
Danish Murder Cases
Female perpetrators
The police's abuse of informants
The Mystery of the Backyard in Vesterbro
The Arlene Fraser murder case
murder mysteries
The murder of Elizabeth Plunkett
The double murder in Herlev
mordssag
justitsmordet
hvidvaskning
cybersikkerhed
mordsager
sundhedsbedrageri
kvaksalveri

Fritzl was initially held in psychiatric detention. In 2024, a Krems court approved his transfer to a regular prison facility, such as Garsten Abbey, subject to a 10-year probation period requiring psychotherapy and regular evaluations. Prosecutors appealed the decision. No release from detention has been approved. As of 2024, Fritzl, now 88, remains imprisoned.

Elisabeth and her children have remained largely out of the public eye since their release, rebuilding their lives away from Amstetten.

**Sources:** https://www.cbsnews.com/news/josef-fritzl-austria-father-daughter-rape-kidnap-prison-court-ruling/ https://www.aetv.com/articles/josef-fritzl https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fritzl_case https://www.crimeandinvestigation.co.uk/crime-files/josef-fritzl https://www.foxnews.com/us/josef-fritzl-transfer-regular-prison

Read more

Danish Murder Cases — episode S12E25 — Criminal Women part 4
Podcast Episode

DNA Breakthrough Solves Brutal 1990 Copenhagen Murder After 34 Years

Danish Murder Cases — episode S12E28 — The Basement Murder
Podcast Episode

DNA, Doubt, and a Danish Hospital Murder

Wisecrack — episode 1 — Edd Hedges and the case from South Warden
Podcast Episode

Wisecrack: When a Comedian's Trauma Became a True Crime Investigation

Related Content
Danish Murder Cases — episode S12E25 — Criminal Women part 4

DNA Breakthrough Solves Brutal 1990 Copenhagen Murder After 34 Years

Danish Murder Cases — episode S12E28 — The Basement Murder

DNA, Doubt, and a Danish Hospital Murder

Wisecrack — episode 1 — Edd Hedges and the case from South Warden

Wisecrack: When a Comedian's Trauma Became a True Crime Investigation

Mørkeland — episode 289 — Vesterbro backyard case 2025

Mørkeland Episode 289: Danish Podcast Explores Slaughterhouse Mystery

Advertisement
SS

Susanne Sperling

View all stories →
Share this post: