Cleveland kidnapper agrees to serve life without parole

Cleveland kidnapper agrees to serve life without parole

CLEVELAND
Cleveland kidnapper agrees to serve life without parole

Ariel Castro, 53, blamed an addiction to pornography and told the court, ‘I’m not a monster.’ AP photo

The man convicted of holding three women captive in his house for more than a decade and raping them repeatedly now faces life without parole plus 1,000 years. One of his victims told him, “I will live on. You will die a little every day.”

Ariel Castro, 53, blamed an addiction to pornography and told the court, “I’m not a monster.”

Castro had pleaded guilty to 937 counts including aggravated murder, kidnapping, rape and assault in a case that horrified the U.S.

He apologized on Aug. 1, but he claimed that most of the sex with the women was consensual. “All the sex was consensual,” Castro told the judge. “The girls were not virgins. They had multiple sex partners before me.”

“These people are trying to paint me as a monster,” he said. “I’m not a monster. I’m sick.”

A deal struck with prosecutors last week spared him from a possible death sentence for beating and starving a pregnant victim until she miscarried.

‘Now your hell is just beginning’

The women disappeared separately between 2002 and 2004 when they were 14, 16 and 20 years old. They escaped May 6 when one of them, Amanda Berry, broke out part of the door to Castro’s house and yelled to neighbors for help.

Castro said he knows what he did was wrong, but that he’s not a violent person and that his captives asked for sex and weren’t tortured.

Judge Michael Russo dismissed Castro’s claims that the women lived a happy life with him.
“I’m not sure there’s anyone in America that would agree with you,” he said.

The women described horrific conditions in the home, and prosecutors displayed photos that gave a first glimpse inside the rooms where they lived. In one room, the window was boarded shut, and the door knobs had been removed and replaced with multiple locks.

“You took 11 years of my life away, and I have got it back,” Michelle Knight told Castro on August 1. “I spent 11 years in hell. Now your hell is just beginning. I will overcome all this has happened, but you will face hell for eternity.”

Knight said she missed her young son every day of her captivity. Knight, 32, did not face Castro as she spoke, but he glanced toward her several times. She was the first woman he abducted in 2002 after he lured her into his house with the promise of a puppy for her son. As Castro was led away, Knight watched, smiling.

FBI agent Andrew Burke said Castro turned his house into a prison by creating a makeshift alarm system and chaining the women inside bolted bedrooms.

Bedroom windows were boarded shut from the inside with heavy closet doors and doorknobs had been removed and replaced with multiple locks, Burke said. The house was divided in ways to make it more secure and to hide the existence of rooms, he said.

One woman had a motorcycle helmet placed on her head while chained in the basement; later, when she tried to escape, she had a vacuum cleaner cord wrapped around her neck.

A police officer who helped rescue the women said one was reluctant to come out of her room even when she saw the officers.

“They were just shouting out a lot of things,” said police officer Barb Johnson. She described the women as thin, pale and scared.

Berry had a baby fathered by Castro. Knight delivered the baby on Christmas Day 2006 in the basement under threat of death from Castro, using a children’s pool to avoid creating a mess. At an earlier court hearing, Castro said he greatly missed his daughter, but the judge rejected a request to see her.

“If you asked my daughter she would say, my dad is the best dad in the world,” Castro said.

Compiled from AP and Reuters stories by the Daily News staff.