
On 2 March 1998, 10-year-old Natascha Maria Kampusch disappeared while walking to school in Vienna's Donaustadt district. Within minutes, she had been dragged into a white minibus by a man later identified as Wolfgang Přiklopil, a 44-year-old technician from Strasshof an der Nordbahn, about 30 kilometres from Vienna. A witness saw her being taken, though Kampusch would later state she did not see a second abductor.
Přiklopil drove her to his house in Strasshof and imprisoned her in a hidden basement cell—a concrete tomb beneath his home where she would remain for the next 8 years and 2 months. The basement became both her prison and her hell. Forced to cook and clean for her captor, Kampusch endured systematic abuse: violent beatings so severe she could barely walk, deliberate starvation, and repeated sexual assault. The psychological torment was equally brutal. Trapped in darkness, isolated from the world she had known, she lived in constant fear of losing her mind.
The 1998 disappearance triggered one of Austria's largest police investigations. Hundreds of white minivans were checked; Přiklopil's van was among them, but he was not considered a serious suspect. The lead went cold. For nearly a decade, Natascha Kampusch existed in the dark, invisible to the outside world.
On 23 August 2006, now 18 years old, Kampusch made her move. While Přiklopil was inside the house, she switched on a vacuum cleaner to mask any sound, then ran. She sprinted approximately 200 metres through gardens and streets, jumping fences as she fled. When she encountered bystanders and asked them to call police, they ignored her desperate pleas. But when she knocked on a neighbour's window—a 71-year-old woman named Inge T.—and identified herself by name, the neighbour believed her and called the authorities.
Police arrived at 1:04 p.m. and transported Kampusch to the station in Deutsch-Wagram. She was free.
The same day, Wolfgang Přiklopil ended his own life. He was found dead beside a railway line in Vienna after setting himself on fire. He never faced trial for his crimes.
The discovery of the secret basement beneath Přiklopil's house shocked Austria. The case exposed serious gaps in the police investigation and sparked public debate about missed leads and investigative failures. Media coverage was intense and unrelenting.


