Cleveland Police Department booking photo of Ariel Castro in Cleveland, Ohio.
Cleveland Police Department booking photo of Ariel Castro in Cleveland, Ohio. Reuters

One of the three Cleveland brothers accused of the kidnapping of three women allegedly wrote a suicide note detailing his troubled childhood and struggles with sex addiction. After a search of the Seymour Avenue home where the three women were held for over a decade, police discovered an unused suicide note written by Ariel Castro. Ariel Castro, 52, is the main suspect in the kidnapping and imprisoning of Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, and Michelle Knight.

In the grisly suicide note, Castro reportedly describes why and how he kidnapped the three women when they were only teenagers. The former school bus driver also partially blames his victims, due to their loose morals allowing them to get into his car.

Castro also states that he had a dysfunctional and disturbing childhood, which led him to become a sex addict.

His dysfunctional childhood stemmed from his family, which the kidnapper believes were the origins of his dark urges. His dark sexual fantasies eventually led Castro to kidnap three young women as sexual slaves, the lengthy suicide note says.

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Ed Gallek, a reporter for 19 Action news tweeted out parts of the kidnappers suicide note which revealed intimate details about how each of the three women were kidnapped. Berry accepted a ride home from the abductor after a shift at Burger King, when she was just 16 years old. Michelle Knight was tricked with the same offer, saying yes to a ride a few years before Berry. And finally Gina DeJesus got into the car with Castro because he was her friend's father.

The three women and a young girl finally escaped the Seymour Avenue home that served as their prison for 10 years. Castro was out of the home and Berry signaled to a neighbor, Charles Ramsey, who helped her break down the door and call 911.

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