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Ariel Castro's first victim hung on wall 'like a fish'

Michelle Knight, in first TV interview, tells of 11-year ordeal in Cleveland home.
Michelle Knight sits with her attorney during the sentencing of Ariel Castro on August 1, 2013 in Cleveland, Ohio. Castro was sentenced to life without parole plus one thousand years for abducting three women, including Knight, from 2002 and 2004 when they were between 14 and 21 years old. The women escaped this past May.

Two months after Ariel Castro hanged himself in prison, the first of his three kidnap victims has offered graphic details of the torture and abuse she suffered during the 11 years he held her captive in his Cleveland home.

In the most startling revelation released in advance, 32-year-old Michelle Knight told TV psychologist Dr. Phil McGraw of being "tied up like a fish" with orange extension cord and being hung on a bedroom wall "like an ornament."

"That's the only way I can describe it," she said, using her hands to draw a picture in the air of being suspended by "my feet, my neck and by the arms" for days at a time — with no food or water or being allowed to use the bathroom.

Knight's interview will air Tuesday and Wednesday. TV networks were interviewing McGraw and showing clips Monday.

Knight, Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus escaped May 6. Castro pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life in prison, but he was found dead in his cell Sept. 3.

After the bedroom torture, Castro took Knight, who was 21 at the time, to his basement, which McGraw described on NBC's Today show as "just nasty — it's filthy, it's cold, it's dark." There, he chained Knight to a pole and put a motorcycle helmet over her head, closing the visor and leaving her.

Knight said in the promotional preview that she was "the most hated one."

She was Castro's only victim for almost a year.

"He said, 'When I get two other girls in the house I'll let you go,'" she told McGraw.

Castro then imprisoned Berry and DeJesus, and the trio were sexually, physically and emotionally abused for 10 more years until Berry pushed out a door and yelled for help.

In their interview, McGraw said Knight told him she had "one beacon" of hope — her 2½-year-old son, who is now 13.

"She said, 'I have to live for him. And I'm fighting to stay alive for him.

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