Daily Mail
November 24, 2013
The young woman kept as a ‘slave’ all her life became obsessed with a neighbour, writing him scented love letters and sending him photographs of herself, it was claimed last night.
The 30-year-old allegedly held captive by a cult-like Left-wing commune along with two older women was seen as ‘spooky’ by neighbours but did have some limited contact with the outside world.
She is said to have sent hundreds of love letters to neighbour Marius Feneck who lived two floors above her at the block of flats in Brixton, South London.
In one of the heat-rending notes, in which she addresses him as her ‘beloved sweetheart’, she warns him not reply or talk to anybody about it because she feared he captors would do something ‘evil’ to him.
Mr Feneck told The Mail on Sunday last night: ‘She used to send me pictures and write me letters about how she wanted to be with me. I wasn’t interested but she wouldn’t stop trying to get with me.’
He showed seven photographs of a slim, brunette woman with pale skin, wearing Western clothes, claiming she stuck them on his door to ‘tempt’ him.
Mr Feneck’s girlfriend, Rachael Price, 25, said the girl, who they knew as ‘Rose’ had been writing him love letters for seven years, posting them when she walked to the local Tesco supermarket with her alleged captors.
‘They were scented and she would walk slightly behind the old couple as they passed the building’s letterboxes on the ground floor, so she could slip them in our letter box.
‘In them she said she loved him and wanted to be with him for ever. There must have been about 500 letters sent to him over the years, some with lipstick kisses on them, and they were deeply obsessive.
‘But she told him never to visit her because she lived with people who were racist.’
Miss Price said the alleged captive had recently written her a ‘vile letter’ falsely accusing her of attacking Mr Feneck.
‘She said I was disgusting, and my children didn’t deserve me. Rose had a weird dead-eyed look to her and I was scared of her. I was thinking of going to the police. If I had gone, she might have got away earlier.