Josef Fritzl says he will see his grandchildren again one day and they will forgive him

The Daily Mail

Josef Fritzl says he will see his grandchildren again one day and they will forgive him

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Joseph Fritzl has told how he dreams of being free one day despite the life sentence he is serving for his appalling crimes. Fritzl shared his rambling thoughts with a lawyer he wrote a book with, based on a series of letters from prison. In the curious rants which have now been made public, the depraved criminal The 87-year-old also told lawyer Astrid Wagner that, after watching King Charles's coronation on TV on Saturday, he decided the monarch is a 'pleasant person'. Fritzl reportedly jokingly described himself as a monarchist in the same letter. He also expressed sympathy for the Last Generation climate activists - whose activities in Germany have been compared to Extinction Rebellion in the UK. He told Wagner: 'I understand those climate campaigners who glue themselves on roads. Everything is going to the dogs these days. You've got to take action.' Earlier this year, Wagner - who is a renowned Viennese lawyer - published a book called 'The Abysses of Josef F' which she co-wrote with Fritzl. Fritzl's latest bid for freedom was dashed when Austrian High Court judges blocked his parole appeal. , who fathered seven children with his daughter who he kept locked in a cellar for 24 years, said he will 'definitely' see his grandchildren again as he languishes in jail, according to a new interview. Speaking on Tuesday, Fritzl, 87, said he expects to live until 130 - and is convinced that his grandchildren will see it in themselves to forgive him by then. Fritzl pleaded guilty to all counts of rape, false imprisonment, manslaughter by negligence and incest in March 2009 after he was found to have kept his daughter, Elisabeth, in a basement underneath the family home from the age of 18. The monster from Amstetten, Lower Austria, started abusing Elisabeth from the age of 11 and fathered seven children with her, with three remaining in captivity, three being raised by Fritzl and his wife and one sadly dying. In the , he detailed his fitness regime and told of how he had saluted King Charles and Queen Camilla during the Coronation on Saturday. He said that he regretted his crimes and the hurt he had caused, adding that he 'would never ever do anything like that again'. In the interview, Fritzl - who is understood to be suffering from dementia - claimed to have reformed after undergoing therapy inside. Last month it was revealed he had detailing how he decided to imprison his daughter and the efforts he went to in order to hide it from his wife. Despite raising three of the children fathered between Fritzl and their daughter, Rosemarie Fritzl - his wife, now 84 - did not know what was going on. Fritzl convinced his wife that Elisabeth had run away to join a cult. He seeks to reconcile with his estranged ex-wife. Her father forced her to write letters to her mother from the basement claiming all was well but that she could not look after her children. The book, Die Abgrunde des Josef F (The Abysses Of Josef F), was published in Germany, with the help of Austrian lawyer Astrid Wagner, in April. Reflecting on his crimes, Fritzl said in his memoir: 'At first it was just a mind game I played. But I got used to it. 'The idea, which had previously seemed so absurd, so monstrous to me, took shape. 'One day I knew what I had to do. All that remained was to wait for the right opportunity. On that rainy Saturday morning the time had come. The thought had become action.' Fritzl intricately set up his underground prison, which featured a heavy metal door hidden behind a shelf in his workroom. He had made sure only he could gain access to it, installing a keyless, secret code entry only known to him. Elisabeth was manipulated by her father into thinking that the door was electrified, so that she would be killed if she tried to flee from the shocking abuse. Elisabeth, who is now 57, was in 2019 to have found love with a bodyguard assigned to protect her. Her identity was changed and she moved to the Austrian countryside to start over. Her partner, Thomas Wagner, moved in with Elisabeth and her children, who are now aged between 17 and 31. She was said to have received effective therapy which has helped her overcome her past trauma.