EXCLUSIVE PICTURES INSIDE THE CLEVELAND KIDNAP HOUSE: Son of 'abductor' reveals how father padlocked doors to basement, attic and garage because 'we weren't allowed to go there'

Photos show Ariel Castro in front of padlocked doors to the basement

Son Anthony, 31, revealed how his father would beat him and once nearly beat his mother to death as she recovered from brain surgery

Expressed his shock at the kidnappings and said they had no idea women were hidden behind the doors they were forbidden from opening

But said his sister believes their father was capable of the crimes

Just three weeks ago, Castro asked his son whether he thought police would ever find one of the victims, Amanda Berry

Ariel Castro padlocked the doors leading to his basement, his attic and his garage and never allowed his family inside, his son has exclusively revealed to MailOnline.

Chilling photographs from 2001 show a grinning Castro, who is accused of holding three women captive for a decade, standing in front of a locked door - behind which unimaginable horrors would allegedly later unfold in the basement.



In an interview with MailOnline, his son Anthony Castro, 31, has spoken of his shock at his father's alleged crimes and revealed how Ariel Castro asked him just weeks ago whether he believed the kidnapping of Amanda Berry - one of his victims - would ever be solved.

'If it's true that he took her captive and forced her into having sex with him and having his child and keeping her hidden and keeping them from sunlight, he really took those girls' lives,' he said.

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'House of horrors': Anthony Castro and his father stand in front of the door to the basement in 2001

Family: A photo from the late 1990's shows Pedro Castro (top right) and his nephew Anthony (seated center)

Ariel Castro, 52, was arrested with his two brothers, 54-year-old Pedro and 50-year-old Onil after Berry, now 26, dramatically escaped from the house on Monday, a decade after she vanished.



Berry was rescued from the home, along with 23-year-old Gina DeJesus, who disappeared in April 2004 at age 14, and 32-year-old Michele Knight, who vanished in 2000 when she was 20.

The women and a six-year-old girl who was born to Berry while she was in captivity were whisked away to hospital. They have now been released and are in a safe location, authorities said.

Details have started to emerge of the horrors they experienced in the house, with authorities reportedly discovering chains and tape to restrain the girls inside the home.

Police sources also told NewsChannel5 that there were multiple pregnancies among the three women but that they suffered miscarriages after they were beaten or because they were so malnourished.



The Castros' close links to the long-running investigation have also emerged. Pedro Castro told a TV crew last July that a police forensic excavation being conducted in the neighborhood for Berry's body was 'a waste of time'.



Shock: Anthony Castro has said he is horrified at news his father, Ariel Castro, allegedly kidnapped three girls and held them captive at his home for a decade. Anthony's uncles have also been arrested

Missed: Anthony said his mother moved them from Castro's home following years of abuse

Speaking to MailOnline on Tuesday, Anthony Castro, a banker who lives in Columbus, Ohio, depicted his father as a violent, controlling man who nearly beat his mother to death in 1993 while she was recovering from brain surgery.

'Abused': Anthony said his father beat his mother, Nilda Figueroa, who passed away last year

Speaking to MailOnline from his apartment, which is dotted with numerous family pictures, Anthony said his father was secretive and barred him from entering certain rooms when he wasn’t around.

Anthony said he last visited his father’s home two weeks ago, though he was not invited inside. He said he never suspected that his father could be keeping three women captive in the basement.

'The only thing I can express is a tremendous level of shock,' he said. 'To those girls, it's beyond comprehension what happened to them. It's just a nightmare. I just feel so horrible for them. Unspeakably horrible.'

Ariel's ex-wife Grimilda 'Nilda' Figueroa - Anthony's mother – moved Mr Castro and his three sisters out of Ariel’s house in 1996 after years of violent abuse.



Anthony said he now speaks with his father just a few times a year – and seldom visits his house.

'I haven't been at that house for longer than 20 minutes for longer than I can remember,' he said. 'And we’re talking since high school. Late 90s.'

Anthony said neither he nor his three sisters have had much of a relationship with Ariel Castro.

'Having that relationship with my dad all these years when we lived in a house where there was domestic violence and I was beaten as well... we never were really close because of that and it was also something we never really talked about,' he said.



Painful memories: Anthony, pictured looking through old family photos, said he rarely spoke to his father

Hurt: Anthony has spoken with family members and they all believe his father is capable of the crimes

'It’s astonishing to even think about that I was so close to that. That I was physically at the house two weeks ago while that was going on, it's a lot to grasp.' Anthony said he has spoken with several members of his family since his father and uncles were arrested. After getting over the initial shock of the horrendous allegations, they all have accepted that Ariel was likely capable of holding the three women against their will

'They're all furious. They're livid,' he said.



Anthony said he has no idea what role his uncles could have played in the ordeal. However, he says he doesn't yet believe that the three women were kept at Ariel's house for the entire 10 years.

He speculated that his uncle Onil, who also owns his house and lives alone, might have been involved in keeping the women in captivity.

Homeowner: Ariel Castro, 52

Brother: Pedro Castro, 54



Arrest: Onil Castro, 50

Scene: Anthony said he rarely visited his father at his Cleveland home, where the women were found

Mother: Lillian Rodriguez (pictured center), the mother of the Castro brothers, returns to her home in Cleveland, Ohio after being questioned by police on Tuesday

Onil had two sons with a former live-in girlfriend of 15 years. The sons are now in their 20s, though Onil split with their mother about 10 years ago. He now lives alone.

'Part of me can believe he had something to do with it,' Anthony said of his uncle. 'Part of me can’t believe that it's something of this magnitude.

'My dad's brothers were the two closest people to him. My dad’s a really private person. If anybody knew what he was doing it would be those two.

'My dad is the most – he is the strongest and most able-bodied about of them. My two uncles are frail. They’ve drunk themselves into terrible health.'

Kidnapped: Amanda Berry, left, was 16 when she went missing in 2003, while another alleged victim, Gina DeJesus, right, was just 14 when she vanished in 2004. Both women were found on Monday

Heading home: Amanda Berry is pictured center with her sister, left, and daughter, right Both men were alcoholics for many years, Anthony said, but Onil has since sobered up. 'When I was a kid, he was always drunk. Both of them, my uncles were always drunk,' he said.

His uncle Pedro, who lived with the mother of the brothers, has been so badly impacted by alcoholism that it's hard to even carry on a conversation with him, he said.

Pedro, he said, seemed content just living with his mother.

'Every time I went to visit my grandmother, he always just seemed be lying on his bed, watching TV. He was there every time.'

Amanda Berry disappeared in 2003 just a day before he 17th birthday. Her disappearance shocked her neighborhood in the west side of Cleveland

Celebration: A 'Welcome Home Gina' sign hangs on a fence outside the home of Gina DeJesus

After the disappearance of Gina DeJesus in April 2004, Anthony Castro penned a piece for his local paper which included quotes from her mother.

He was a journalism student at Bowling Green State University when he wrote the article, entitled 'Gina DeJesus’ disappearance has changed her neighborhood', for the Plain Press in June of that year.

Gina's mother Nancy Ruiz told him: 'You can tell the difference. People are watching out for each other’s kids. It’s a shame that a tragedy had to happen for me to really know my neighbors.