Is Austrian incest suspect a murderer too?
AMSTETTEN, Austria (AP) - April 30, 2008 Alois Lissl, the chief of police of Upper Austria province, told
The Associated Press that although no evidence had surfaced so far,
police have widened their investigation into the unsolved murder 22
years ago to include the incest suspect.
The bound body of 17-year-old Martina Posch was found on a shore
of the Upper Austrian lake of Mondsee in 1986. Josef Fritzl's wife
owned part of an inn and camping ground on the other side of the
lake at that time.
Fritzl would be asked for an alibi because the property owned by
his wife could mean he was in the area when Posch was killed, Lissl
said.
"We are looking at the case from a third angle," he said of
the new direction the investigation has taken.
Fritzl, 73, confessed Monday to imprisoning his daughter
Elisabeth for 24 years in a warren of soundproofed cellar rooms,
sexually abusing her, fathering seven children with her and
discarding the body of an one, who died in infancy, in a furnace.
On Tuesday, tests confirmed that the retired electrician is the
biological father of his daughter's six surviving children.
Three of the children were locked in the underground labyrinth
with their mother for years.
The case started unfolding on April 19 when one of the children
held captive was found unconscious and was taken to a hospital.
After receiving a tip, police picked up Elisabeth and her father on
Saturday. Fritzl freed the captive children the same day.
Authorities say Fritzl led his wife to believe that Elisabeth
had run away to join a religious cult when she disappeared.