Girl in the Cellar (14 page)

Read Girl in the Cellar Online

Authors: Allan Hall

BOOK: Girl in the Cellar
4.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

 

The sign at the town limits of Strasshof that Natascha was driven past by her kidnapper on the way to the cellar where she would spend the next eight years of her life.
© ABC, Vienna
© EuroPics(CEN)/Michael Leidig

 

 

In the aftermath of her daughter's disappearance, Natascha's mother Brigitta Sirny displays one of the police missing posters put up across the capital.
© ABC, Vienna
(Sipa Press)

 

 

The missing poster that was posted on the Internet as the hunt for Natascha went international and fears grew she had been sold into the child sex trade.
© ABC, Vienna
© Rex Features

 

 

Wolfgang Priklopil's seemingly unremarkable home, where Natascha spent 3,096 days locked in a cellar.
© ABC, Vienna
© EuroPics(CEN)/Michael Leidig

 

 

The stairs from the garage leading down to a small workshop where there was a concealed entrance to Natascha's dungeon.
© ABC, Vienna
© EuroPics(CEN)

 

 

Priklopil's system of concealment was virtually foolproof. This is the cupboard in front of the hidden entrance.
© ABC, Vienna
© EuroPics(CEN)

 

 

The last of four doors that leads from the antechamber to the tiny dungeon. One of the four cellar doors nearly severed Priklopil's finger in the early days of Natascha's imprisonment.
© ABC, Vienna
© Rex Features

 

 

Courtesy Bundeskriminalamt, Vienna

 

 

A graphic representation of Natascha's hidden dungeon home. The uniquely horrifying nature of her ordeal has been constantly stressed by all those who have been involved in the case.
© ABC, Vienna
Courtesy Bundeskriminalamt, Vienna

 

 

View from the entrance to the cellar room showing Natascha's elevated bed.
© ABC, Vienna
© EuroPics(CEN)

 

 

The day before she was kidnapped, Natascha had told a friend she dreamed of having her own writing desk, not knowing how soon she would get her wish.
© ABC, Vienna
© Rex Features

 

 

A tiny space at the end of the hidden room was Natascha's bathroom and toilet with no barrier between it and the living area where she passed the time.
© ABC, Vienna
© EuroPics(CEN)

 

 

Other books

The Fixer Of God's Ways (retail) by Irina Syromyatnikova
Wrath Games by B. T. Narro
Lust Or No Harm Done by Geoff Ryman
Authority by Jeff VanderMeer
So Much Blood by Simon Brett
If I Wait For You by Jane Goodger
Second Chances: A PAVAD Duet by Calle J. Brookes
Marry Me by Kristin Wallace