Ariel Castro's ex-relatives describe abusive behavior - CBS News

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Updated 10:02 PM ET
CLEVELAND A man accused of keeping three women captive in his run-down home for about a decade and raping them repeatedly had terrorized the mother of his children years earlier, beating her and locking her indoors, her relatives said Thursday.
In interviews with The Associated Press, relatives of Grimilda Figueroa, who left Ariel Castro years ago and died last year after a long illness, described Castro as a "monster" who abused her. Castro once shoved her into a cardboard box and closed the flaps over her head, said Elida Caraballo, her sister.
"He told her, `You stay there until I tell you to get out,"' said Caraballo, who cried as she recounted her late sister's torment. "That's when I got scared and I ran downstairs to get my parents."
Castro, a 52-year-old former school bus driver, was arrested Monday, when one of the three women, Amanda Berry, broke out of his house and called 911 while he was away. Police found the two other women inside. The women had vanished separately between 2002 and 2004 when they 14, 16 and 20 years old.
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Castro has been charged with rape and kidnapping. He's being held on $8 million bail under a suicide watch in jail. During his brief arraignment Thursday, he tried to hide his face and didn't speak or enter a plea. A public defender assigned to represent him didn't comment on his guilt or innocence.
Some relatives of Castro have said they were shocked by the allegations against him. An uncle, Julio Castro, said it's been difficult news to absorb.
"Of course we have taken it hard," he said. "We only knew one Ariel, my sweet nephew. He was a sweet, happy person, a musician. We didn't have the slightest idea of the second person in him."
Among many beatings over the years, Castro shoved Figueroa down a flight of stairs, broke her nose several times and dislocated her shoulder, Caraballo said.
Castro kept her imprisoned inside her own home, locking the doors from the inside, Caraballo said. He forbade her from using the telephone and, after warning her not to leave, tested her to see if she obeyed, Caraballo said.
"He would go creeping downstairs, not telling her that he's home, spying on her," Caraballo said. "See who she's calling. Next thing you know, he'll pop upstairs."
Castro, to frighten his wife, kept a mannequin wearing a dark wig propped up against a wall, and once when she was returning home with her arms full of groceries he jumped into the doorway with it, frightening her so badly she fell and hit her head, Caraballo said.
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In 1996, Castro hit Figueroa for the last time, family members said. Figueroa ran outside with one of her sons, crying out to neighbors, just as the captive women did on Monday, Caraballo said.
"The neighbors went across the street to get her," Caraballo said. "And that was the last time she ever stepped in the house."
Monica Stephens, Castro's former daughter-in-law, who now lives in Florida, met Castro's son in 2002. They married in 2004 but split up in 2006. Stephens on Thursday recalled conversations with her ex-husband in which he said he and his mother were beaten by Castro.
"They were like hostages in their own house," she said.
According to court documents, Figueroa filed a request for a domestic violence protective order on August 29, 2005, alleging that Castro abused her and threatened to kill her and their children, most recently on August 25, 2005 - four days before the complaint was filed.
"Broken petitioner's nose (twice,) ribs, lacerations, knocked out tooth, blood clot on brain (inoperable tumor,) dislocated shoulder (twice - one each side,) threatened to kill petitioner and daughters 3,4 times just this year, etc.," read the protective order.
The documents reveal that the couple had two daughters - Emily and Arlene, who lived with Figueroa. Figueroa also had a son, Ryan Colon, born to another man, according to the documents. Though Figueroa had full custody of the children and Castro wasn't afforded visitation rights, Castro "frequently abducts daughters and keeps them from mother," the documents read.
The documents included an order for Castro to attend counseling, not to abuse Figueroa and other family members, and to refrain from contacting her. Under "additional provisions," the order read, "keep respondent from threatening to kill petitioner."
The domestic violence protective order, however, was dismissed on November 23, 2005 after Figueroa's attorney couldn't attend a Nov. 1 court hearing, the documents reveal.

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