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CRIME

Murder victim identified in Austria after 23 years

A body of a murdered woman found in Austria 23 years ago has finally been identified after the case was re-examined last year using new forensic technology.

Murder victim identified in Austria after 23 years
“Rosi” was a sex worker who worked in Burgenland and Upper Austria. Photo: Polizei

The woman, whose body was discovered on a horse paddock near the city of Eisenstadt in 1993, is thought to be a sex worker born in 1962 originally from the Dominican Republic.

She used the name “Rosi”, although investigators do not know her real name, and worked in several brothels in Burgenland and Upper Austria.

Criminal investigators have now released her image in the hope that new evidence and witnesses will come forward.

Rosi was found early one morning just outside the town of St. Margarethen having been wrapped up in black wrapping material, having been strangled to death.

Her body had also been bitten several times by animals, her thigh bone had been sawn through and her upper arm had been broken.

Police had been unable to identify her at the time and her murder became a cold case until last year when new forensic evidence emerged and new examinations were carried out using modern technology.

“These investigations produced evidence that led to the identification of the victim,” said Johann Fuchs from Eisenstadt state prosecutors.

“Who knows this woman and can offer information about her whereabouts and contact person in Austria, particularly in the years 1991 to 1993?,” prosecutors ask.

Violence against sex workers

Several studies have shown that female sex workers often face more violence towards them at work than women in other employment.

In 2004 in the United States, the murder rate for female sex workers was 204 per 100,000 compared to 4 per 100,000 for the next most dangerous profession, female liquor store workers.

Famously, Austrian serial killer Jack Unterweger was convicted for murdering 11 sex workers between 1990 and 1992 in Austria and abroad.

The case was extremely controversial as Unterweger had already been sentenced to 14 years for murdering a woman in 1974 and had been released as a rehabilitation ‘success’ story in 1990.

He became a celebrity in Austria following his release although it is now known he continued killing women throughout this time. He was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1994, although he committed suicide in his cell shortly after receiving his sentence.

CRIME

Austrian court approves incest rapist Fritzl’s transfer to regular jail

An Austrian court said Tuesday it had approved the transfer of incest rapist Josef Fritzl to a regular jail as the 89-year-old was now unlikely to commit a crime.

Austrian court approves incest rapist Fritzl's transfer to regular jail

Fritzl, who has changed his name, repeatedly raped his daughter he locked in a cellar for over 24 years, fathering seven children with her.

Served with a life sentence in 2019, Fritzl has been held in jail for the mentally ill who pose a high degree of danger in Krems, some 80 kilometres (50 miles) northwest of Vienna.

In a ruling published Tuesday, the Krems regional court said Fritzl “can be transferred… to normal detention” since he “no longer poses a danger that requires placement” in a jail psychiatric unit.

It noted Fritzl’s “advanced dementia and physical decline” and said he was “no longer likely to commit a criminal offence with serious consequences”.

It also set a 10-year probation period.

READ ALSO: Could Austria’s notorious incest rapist Josef Fritzl one day be released?

The decision confirms an initial ruling in January, which was overturned by a higher court in March after prosecutors appealed.

Monday’s ruling follows a hearing on April 30, where updated findings by psychiatric experts were presented.

The verdict can still be appealed within the next two weeks.

Contacted by AFP, Fritzl’s lawyer, Astrid Wagner, called the ruling “a big success”, adding that she doesn’t expect prosecutors to appeal.

“Fritzl could be transferred as soon as the appeal period of two weeks has lapsed,” Wagner said, adding that she would apply for a conditional release from jail by 2025.

Fritzl was jailed for the murder by neglect of a newborn baby he fathered with his daughter Elisabeth while holding her in the specially-built basement of his house.

He was also found guilty of incest, sequestration, grievous assault and 3,000 instances of rape.

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