Kidnapped girl free after eight-year captivity

VickyH

Self-proclaimed Genius
Oct 10, 2005
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Vienna- A young woman escaped to freedom Wednesday afternoon after eight years' captivity in Austria's most sensational post-war kidnapping case, said initial police reports. The report said Natascha Kampusch, who disappeared without trace aged ten on March 2, 1998, had been held captive in a cellar within 30 kilometres of Vienna.

Natascha's disappearance happened at a time when Europe was preoccupied by the notorious Belgian Dutroux case of child abduction and murder.

In 1998 she vanished on her way to school in Vienna. A nationwide search was immediately launched. Hundreds of police scoured the whole of eastern Austria. Helicopters were brought in, and rivers dragged. No trace of her was ever found.

On Wednesday afternoon a young woman suddenly appeared at Deutsch Wagram in eastern Austria. First reports said she was thrown out, or had jumped out, of a car. Austrian ORF television reported she had been seen "staggering around" in a garden.

The woman told police her name was Natascha Kampusch. Comparative DNA tests were immediately started. A nationwide search was launched for the driver of the car. Natascha's parents were called in to possibly identify their daughter.

Head of Vienna criminal police Herwig Haidinger said the Kampusch case could finally have come to "a happy end." But it was not yet 100 per cent certain whether the young woman was in fact Natascha. However, relatives had already identified her.

Haidinger said the suspect wanted for kidnapping was a 44-year-old man named as "Wolfgang P.", resident in the village of Strasshof near Gaenserndorf, where Natascha had apparently been held for most or all of the time.

Police said the young woman had told them her captor had allowed her to listen to radio, but only occasionally TV. She had had access to newspapers, but had mostly been cut off from the outside world.

Investigators said the young woman gave an appearance of "having been away from the light of day for a long time." Her skin was pale. Otherwise she made a good impression. "She expresses herself well, and can read and write," said an investigator.
 
dreaming neon darkspot said:
So i guess i have to be the one to make the douchebag comment and ask what took her so long?


she was locked in a dungeon under the house ... she was 10 years old when get kidnapped
 
derek said:
I saw this on the news the other day. It's quite a bizarre case. I believe the guy was found dead, suicide, I think.


yeah ur right ...
 
It makes sense, especially if she had managed to escape.

I feel for her, I really do. I'm sure you're all aware of Stockholm syndrome, and at 10yrs old it is more than likely she was psychologically impacted by the events. So Laura, yeah...douchebaggery :p
 
sucks for her....:lol:
sorry, i had to make a shitty joke in this thread.

Seriously, she now has to go to school along 10 year olds, but she is 18 and THAT sucks. And she also won\'t be normal because that experience must have been really reallly shitty and traumatic for her.

i send her my best whishes
 
Girl had 'sexual contact' with captor
Email Print Normal font Large font August 27, 2006 - 12:06PM

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AdvertisementAn Austrian girl held captive in a windowless cell for eight years before escaping said she had "sexual contact" with her kidnapper, police say.

Federal police spokesman Erich Zwettler had no further details on the sexual contact disclosed by Natascha Kampusch, now 18.

Kampusch, 10 when kidnapped as she walked to school, managed to evade her abductor on Wednesday when he took a phone call as she was vacuuming his car.

The man, Wolfgang Priklopil, committed suicide by throwing himself under a train after she fled.

Zwettler confirmed a Vienna newspaper report that Kampusch told investigators shortly after she escaped that she had had "sexual contact" with Priklopil, 44, but did not elaborate.

Kampusch's disappearance in 1998 caused anguish across the Alpine republic and her reappearance long after most had given her up for dead astonished the nation.

Kampusch had been held in a windowless cell below Priklopil's house. DNA tests on the kidnapper did not link him with any other crimes, police said.

That doused speculation Priklopil might have been a serial stalker of children, police Major-General Gerhard Lang said.

Zwettler said Kampusch was now at a secret, secure location, with psychological carers, and would be spared further questioning until at least Monday.

"She urgently needs a break (from stress). She wants peace and quiet. She's an adult now so she can stay where she is as long as she wants," he said.

Kampusch was briefly reunited with her divorced parents on Wednesday but had not asked to see relatives since.

"She may have lost her original trust in people, which could lead to rejecting her parents, which has happened to other kidnapping victims," court psychiatrist Reinhard Haller said.

"A 10-year-old girl left her home and is returning as a traumatised woman. A normal prisoner knows why he is in prison. It's not so Kafka-esque (as Kampusch's case)."

The parents, who separated after her abduction, complained on Saturday they had not been told where Natascha was staying.

"Why can't I see my daughter?" Brigitta Sirny told the Kurier daily in a report released ahead of Sunday's publication.

"Natascha is shut away once again. It's terrible for me. Psychologists and doctors - that's all good and important. But my daughter also needs her mother," she said.

"I'd like Natascha to live with me again, but she's 18 now and she'll decide herself."

Her father, Ludwig Koch, told the Austria Press Agency: "Isn't it crazy that I don't even know where she is?"

He also said he wanted Natascha to live with him and added Natascha had written to him asking for understanding that she needed to "find release" over the weekend.

Haller said preventing uncontrolled access to Kampusch was necessary for the time being.

"She has been plunked suddenly in the middle of everyone's interest. That is a 180-degree turn from what she had been experiencing (for years)," he said.

Monika Pinterits, a children's lawyer in contact with Kampusch, said the young woman was avoiding self-pity.

"She's very sensible and eloquent. She's following the media coverage with great interest. It disturbs her that she is often portrayed as special case. She (doesn't see herself as) a poor victim, but a grown young woman," Pinterits told APA.

Kampusch was pallid and trembling when she escaped from her pen in Strasshof, a village outside Vienna, and weighed only 42 kg, less than she did as a 10-year-old.

Reuters