WORLD> Europe
![]() |
Austria: Prosecutor urges life sentence for Fritzl
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-03-19 19:57 ST. POELTEN – Prosecutors urged an Austrian jury to hand down a life sentence Thursday to Josef Fritzl - who imprisoned his daughter in a windowless cell for 24 years and fathered her seven children - and not to show mercy just because he pleaded guilty.
In a weak and shaky voice, Fritzl told the court Thursday: "I regret it with all my heart. ... I can't make it right anymore."
"Don't be duped like Elisabeth was 24 years ago," when Fritzl took her captive in a cramped, rat-infested dungeon he built beneath the family's home. The eight-member jury began deliberating at midmorning. Verdicts and sentences were expected Thursday afternoon in the case, which has drawn worldwide attention. Fritzl, 73, pleaded guilty Wednesday to all the charges against him, including homicide for the death in captivity of an infant boy. Prosecutors contend the ailing newborn might have survived if Fritzl had arranged for medical care. "Any amateur could have determined that the child was in the throes of death for 66 hours," Burkheiser said, arguing that Fritzl should be locked up for the rest of his life for refusing to intervene and save the baby's life. Fritzl also has pleaded guilty to enslavement, rape, incest, forced imprisonment and coercion. Eva Plaz, a lawyer for Elisabeth and the other victims, urged the jury not to lessen Fritzl's sentence just because he pleaded guilty. In Austria, guilty pleas can be a mitigating factor. Fritzl's pleas "were not a confession," Plaz said. Fritzl's lawyer, Rudolf Mayer, did not argue that Fritzl was innocent - even telling the court at one point that Fritzl raped his daughter 3,000 times. But he said Fritzl had been plagued with guilt for the past 24 years, and he asked the jurors to take a hard look at the homicide charge. "Look closely at murder," Mayer said, referring to the homicide count - literally "murder by neglect" in German. "In my opinion, that's not what it is," he said. The Associated Press normally withholds the names of victims of sexual assault. In this case, withholding Elisabeth's name became impractical when her name and her father's were announced publicly by police and details about them became the subject of publicity both in their home country and around the world. Mayer confirmed Thursday that Elisabeth had been in the courtroom earlier this week, and he said Fritzl decided to stop contesting the homicide and enslavement counts after viewing her 11-hour heart-wrenching videotaped testimony. |