20/20 - True Crime Vault: Taken
Episode Date: September 2, 2025The couple at the center of the so-called "Gone Girl" kidnapping case reveal details to "20/20." Originally broadcast: June 4, 2021 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoic...es
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Welcome to the True Crime Vault, home to 2020's most chilling stories.
This is a crazy story about a home invasion.
A 29-year-old woman being abducted from her boyfriend's home in the middle of the night doesn't happen.
People were terrified.
This ninja is suddenly in their bedroom waking them up.
I've been covering crime for more than two decades.
I've never seen anything like it.
We're talking about swim goggles, blacked out headphones,
giving instructions, full-body wetsuits.
I mean, when do you hear about things like this?
I feel like I am some character in this crime drama.
I'm like in a movie.
Frogman obviously didn't do it.
So who did it now?
Not only do they tell you they don't believe you,
they say we think you killed her.
He is the closest person and the last person to have seen Denise alive.
There's no question in my mind that you failed this test.
And you failed it miserably.
You know where she is.
I don't know where she is.
I'm telling the truth.
I know it's the craziest thing.
I told him, look, there's going to be a nightmare,
and there's no way you're going to be able to pinch yourself and wake up.
I remember being asleep and hearing a voice and thinking it was a dream.
Denise Huskins vanished from her boyfriend's home on Mary.
This voice was trying to pull me out of the dream and I was resisting.
Like, no, no, no.
Kidnap the ransom abducted from her Bay Area home.
But the voice kept talking and I just remember my eyes shot open and I could see the walls illuminated with a white light that.
with a white light that was flashing, and I could see a couple red laser dots crossing
the wall, and I could hear, wake up, this is a robbery, and in that moment, I just thought,
oh my God, this is not a dream.
Tonight, Denise Huskins is still missing.
Police have no suspects.
I woke up on my back, and I actually was, like, frozen.
They questioned her boyfriend, and I didn't move.
I think I was in shock.
The new twist in what some call the real-life gone girl.
He tells me that he's going to put zip ties on the edge of the bed.
And I'm going to secure Aaron's hands behind his back and his feet together.
So I'm kneeling on the bed and I'm looking down at Aaron.
And I could see him take a deep breath in and on his exhale,
he just said, oh, my God.
And I'm just going, what the hell is this?
And how the hell could this be meant?
for anyone.
I was living on Mayor Island.
Mayor Island is a beautiful island.
It's part of Alejo, which is just outside San Francisco.
Mayor Island used to be a naval base,
and they started building residential areas around there.
Newer homes, a pretty quiet neighborhood for the most part.
White picket fence is kind of that California
quintessential bedroom community.
I bought that home in 2012, and I was really proud of it.
It was the first big, giant purchase.
When Aaron moved in there, he thought that he was going to live there for the rest of his life,
get married, raise his family there.
I moved to Vallejo for a residency.
Denise Hoskins and Aaron Quinn meet.
They're both physical therapists.
Denise is doing a person.
prestigious physical therapy residency,
and Aaron's a physical therapist in the same department.
This is one of the most incredible, unforgettable stories
I have ever covered, and it begins as a love story.
How did you two actually decide to become romantic?
He told me that he was interested in me,
and he wanted to spend more time with me.
So at the time Aaron and Denise met,
Aaron had just broken up with his fiance.
I found out that she was having an affair.
I was very conflicted because I obviously was attracted, Denise.
I also didn't trust myself anymore.
And I could see who Aaron was, the man he was, and the good in him.
I knew that he would be a great partner, but I could see that he was struggling.
As any woman in that situation might be, Denise was a little concerned that Aaron might still have feelings for his ex.
So I just advise her, just be careful.
I don't want to see you get hurt.
And then when I went up to visit and it met up with Aaron and her, wow, it just seemed so mature.
Aaron brought Denise up to visit, and she was very pleasant, very nice, seemed smart,
looked a little bit like his ex-fiancee.
It was happy that he had another girlfriend.
There were about seven months into their relationship when his ex-fiance is still really a source of tension.
I suspected that maybe there was something going on that I, he wasn't being fully honest with me about.
And so I checked his phone and saw that he had been reaching out to her and saying things like he wanted to get back together with her, which just devastated me.
When she found the text message, I was at crossroads of my life and I needed to make a change.
I finally just put my foot down and said, look, I don't deserve this.
And it was a couple of weeks of kind of going back and forth.
And I wasn't sure what I wanted to do, but I wanted to hear him out.
And just last minute, that Sunday, it's like, you know what, I'll just, I'll come over.
And I'll see what you have to say.
And we'll go from there.
I brought a pizza, and we sat on the couch.
most of the night and talked.
We talked about how it would be difficult.
Like I, we had to rebuild trust,
but as long as he was willing to really give this
a full shot, then we could try again.
It sounds like March 22nd would have been a memorable night
in your relationship, no matter what.
That night was really positive night,
and we went to bed, feeling like there's definitely work to do,
but it did feel like a fresh start.
At about midnight, they go out of the night.
They go upstairs and they go to sleep.
Sometime around 3 a.m., they wake up to a voice that says,
wake up, this is a robbery.
This ninja is suddenly in their bedroom, waking them up.
And the first thing that this person says is,
we're not here to hurt you.
This is financial, which is immediately going to get some level of compliance from them.
It's like, okay, okay, just don't hurt us.
I tie his hands together and then his feet together, and then the boy says, good job.
Now walk to the bedroom closet.
Keep your head face down.
Do not look up.
She's thinking, if I see their faces, they're going to have a motivation to kill me.
She's trying to comply in order to survive.
And as I'm walking and turning the corner of the bed, I could see two legs from two different people.
So it wasn't just one person.
There was more than one person in that room.
Yeah.
And as I walked by, the one closest to the closet followed behind me.
He tied me up in the closet and went to get Aaron and helped him hop over to the closet.
When I lay down in the closet, I could hear a drill going on in one part of downstairs
and people going through my captain.
I was hoping they're stealing stuff.
The intruder puts swim goggles over their eyes.
The lenses are covered with black tape.
and he puts headphones over their ears.
There was these pre-recorded messages
giving us instructions.
What did those pre-recorded messages say?
That they were going to give us a sedative.
And if we didn't take it, they would inject it intravenously.
This is an organized, planned event.
When the voice put headphones on me,
my recordings started with this kind of muffled whisper of,
it was like, Aaron quick to the window.
Aaron quick to the window.
He called you by your name.
Yes.
What goes through your mind at that moment?
That we're in a lot of trouble, and this is planned.
And then the intruder says, we have a problem.
And so we got the wrong intel.
They're not there for Denise and Aaron.
They're there for Aaron and his ex-fiance.
It's the middle of the night, Denise and Aaron,
were woken at 3 a.m. by intruders.
They're both now bound and are in Aaron's master bedroom closet.
When the voice came back to the closet, what did he say to you?
He said he was going to move me to the router room, which was the spare bedroom where the router was located.
So he knew where the router was.
He knew the layout of the house.
Yeah, and that was another indication of the planning involved.
And so he guided me to the next bedroom
and again played a new set of recordings.
This time, it actually had threats saying
they were going to ask us personal financial information,
but if they thought that we were lying,
that they would then cut our partner's face
or give electric shock.
He got my laptop and then forced me to give up my social security number,
my bank accounts, you know, where I had banked, where I had my credit cards.
He's asking him for all kinds of personal information.
They're looking for email and password information.
They're looking for banking information.
They're going to take all my money.
That's fine.
I'll figure it out.
And obviously, I was wrong about that.
He's being asked questions.
And at some point, the intruder realizes they've got the wrong person.
The intruder says, we have a problem.
and he says to Aaron, do Denise and your ex-fiance
look alike? And he knew your ex-girlfriend's name.
Yeah, I just let out. This is like guttural sigh.
I was like, yes, they both have long, blonde hair.
And so we got the wrong intel.
They're not there for Denise and Aaron.
They're there for Aaron and his ex-fiance.
They used to live there together, and she has moved out,
and in fact, only recently he's gotten all of her stuff out of the house.
He said, we have to figure out what we're going to do and walks out.
Part of me had hoped if this is the wrong person, maybe they'll just leave.
Deep down, you knew that they weren't going to leave.
Yeah.
And then the next time you came in, he said, this is what we're going to do.
We're going to take you for 48 hours.
Aaron's going to have to complete some tasks.
It's never a good outcome when you're taken to a second location.
No.
I thought that it was probably the beginning of the end of my life,
and I could only imagine what was in store for me.
I was eventually moved down to the couch.
He right away is told that there was a camera on the wall
that will be watching his every move.
There are tape markings on the ground,
setting up a perimeter that he can't leave.
He puts duct tape around my ankles.
He asked me if I'm comfortable,
And I was shivering, I asked for a blanket, and he goes, oh, I'm sorry, I didn't realize how cold it is because we're wearing wetsuits.
Wet suits, that is a brilliant thing for a criminal to do, because you're not going to leave any trace evidence.
The intruder explains to him that they're going to communicate with him via text and email, specifically to an email account that they've set up.
It tells me I need to stay there until the morning.
I have to call on sick to work, and they had given me Denise's passcode to her phone.
and I need to text her boss
and tell them that she had family emergency
who's going to be gone for the week.
I would need to go to a bank,
get the money that they requested.
I would have to keep up my phone line open.
They're going to have a camera
to monitor me.
If I try to communicate,
they would hurt Denise.
If I went to the police, they would kill her.
And they would give me further instructions in the morning.
Denise is then being taken away.
She doesn't know where she's going,
and she's scared.
He lifts her,
up, he puts her in the Aaron's trunk.
I knew I just needed to stay focused and calm.
Then Aaron's worst nightmare, he hears the trunk of his car get closed.
I was afraid that was going to be like the last time.
I was going to see her.
I'd use the corner of the couch to push the goggles off, and there was a digital clock
and it was exactly 5 a.m.
So Aaron's desperately trying to keep his eyes open, but the sedative is really making him tired.
I was just going to stay away, I'd pass out, and then my alarm went off, and I called in sick.
I was able to, like, wiggle my hands free, and then I text our manager, and then I was trying to stay awake, and I just passed out again.
I didn't wake up until 11.30.
And when I looked around, I was trying to stay awake, and I just passed out again. I didn't wake up until at 11. I didn't wake up until 11. And when I looked around,
there was a house with red tape around the borders defining where I should be, where the camera
can see me.
Shortly after, emails and text start coming in from the intruders, giving Aaron instructions.
They tell me they want two payments of $8,500 to avoid the $10,000 federal reporting limit.
He starts messaging the intruders, and he hears nothing.
My mind's racing is like 20 minutes, about 30 minutes, and I finally come.
call myself. I start trying to think, and I realize, like, if I sent, give him the money,
it could just take me and kill both of us. So I can't trust people who do this.
He starts thinking, his brother's an FBI agent. Do I call my brother? Do I call the police? What do I do?
Imagine this agonizing period of time. Finally, he makes the decision, I've got to call Ethan,
his brother who works for the FBI. His brother instructs him that they, they,
always tell you this to not call 911.
They tell you they're going to track you,
but you need to call 911 right now.
Aaron's holding his breath as he dials.
He's doing the exact thing the intruders told him not to do.
I hit 9 and 1 and I just hesitate.
He thinks if I press this one, if I finish,
calling the police, I might just get Denise killed.
Either I'm, Denise is going to be dead or she'll, or hopefully we'll be able to save her.
The police are summoned to his home, and phase two, the nightmare begins.
Aaron's hoping that police are going to come to his rescue, but he is in for a surprise.
I'm telling you, it did not happen the way that you're describing it. It did not.
Period. I didn't hurt her. I didn't do any of that.
By the time Aaron calls police shortly before 2 p.m., it's nearly nine hours since Denise has been taken.
After I hit 9-1-1, it was all or nothing.
I opened a door and there's two officers, and one of the first questions they asked are you on drugs?
I said, yes, the kidnapper struck me.
They come in, and the first thing they do
is rip that camera off the wall
that he believes the intruders are watching him on.
I just kind of gasped, like, what are you doing?
From the police perspective,
what they're confronted with is a man
who said that his girlfriend was kidnapped
in the middle of the night.
There is a crazy story about this home invasion.
They noticed there was a clean scent in the home.
as though the carpets have been recently vacuumed.
When they get to Aaron's bedroom, they notice there's a very small amount of blood on the bed sheet.
We have a comforter that's missing.
Aaron is in possession of Denise's phone, which he used to text her employer.
Aaron's car is missing, and they know that he's waited a substantial period of time before dialing 911.
They see all the components of what you might expect to see objectively in a domestic violence murder.
murdering. Eventually, those officers
seem to soften a little bit, and they
tell them they were going to take me the station to
give a statement.
My name's Marianne Quinn.
I am Aaron Quinn's mother.
My other son, Ethan, had sent us a text,
so I called Ethan. He said,
Denise has been kidnapped, and Aaron's at the police station.
And I was just, I was shocked.
And I said, well, we're coming down.
When I first went to the police station, they take DNA samples, and they tell me that they have to take my clothes.
So I go, that's fine, take it.
They hand me a pair of pants and a shirt, and I look down at these pants.
And I said it's a Salono County prison on it.
And I realized that the prison clothes.
You're now in the police station talking to police, telling them your story.
They were asking fairly open-ended questions.
I acknowledge I'm like, this sounds like it's a movie.
I know it sounds bizarre.
We're talking about swim goggles blacked out with tape,
headphones giving instructions,
intruders that are in full-body wetsuits.
I mean, when do you hear about things like this?
They told me an area I need to stay in my house
said that there was going to be video recording
to monitor and make sure that I don't contact anyone.
Detective Matt Mustard basically glazes over the incident at the house and starts asking about our relationship.
I had been talking to my ex and at that time when I was still dating Denise.
Is there tension and the relationship?
Is she mad?
I mean, she's upset.
Concerned?
Is she cheating?
No, well, she felt that emotionally that was cheating in some sense.
He starts asking questions about Denise and you guys were having problems.
having problems and the tone starts to change.
I mean, did she like discover something?
Wow.
I mean, she's like going through your phone and like, you know, what the hell is this?
She went through my phone.
What's your phone?
What is that?
Uh, I mean, I still care to want to work things through.
Aaron admits that they've had tension in their relationship.
So you can sort of understand why police might be a little bit suspicious.
They also are going to look at him as a suspect because he is the closest person and the last person
to have seen Denise alive.
At what point do you realize that you're in trouble,
in big trouble?
I know about 45 minutes in, he leans back in his chair
and he tells me, I don't think you're being truthful.
I don't think anybody came into your house.
The story you're telling here?
I'm buying it all.
You've got to think about how this is all going to play out.
I don't have anything to think about.
I'm telling you what.
There ain't no frogmen came into your house.
Nobody dressed in wetsuits or it didn't happen.
Remember, if Aaron's story is true, Denise has been kidnapped,
so every minute that ticks by, she's an incredible danger.
All this is going on with him, his parents and his brother are at the police station.
They grilled his parents.
We were telling him what a good kid he was.
They kept asking, has he ever got angry?
as he, you know, has he done drugs?
As a teenager, he was easy.
He was a quarterback for the high school.
He got voted as the boy of the year.
That's what they call for leadership abilities
and commitment to good values.
They really, really did not want to hear that.
They had already decided he had killed her.
They said maybe we're in a fight
and I pushed her down the stairs.
Maybe we're experimenting with drugs.
Maybe we were experimenting with prescription drugs.
Maybe we were into weird sex things and something went wrong.
I don't think this happened intentionally.
I think something happened, accidental,
and you got to the point where you reacted the way that you did
and you had to come up with this story.
They were trying to get him to make the simplest concessions.
You and her weren't getting along.
You're a good guy, but you lost your temper.
You killed her and threw her in the bay.
Not only do they tell you they don't believe you, they say we think you killed her.
Yes.
Could you watch the Lacey Peterson got whatever the hell his name was?
Did you watch that story in the public out of Modesto?
Today is the third day of an all-out search for Lacey Peterson.
Mustard even brings up the Lacey Peterson case.
I came home and called Mom and Lacey wasn't there and no one had seen her.
Scott Peterson famously murdered his wife Lacey in kind of the same.
same general area, Central California, she and her unborn baby were eventually recovered in the San Francisco Bay.
Investigators say they plan to bring Lacey's husband, Scott, in for more questioning.
You look at that and you go, that dude's a lion son of a bitch. That's the way people will look at you.
They're telling him that he's going to be perceived as a monster, and he keeps saying frogman because this person told them that he was wearing a wetsuit.
The frogman obviously didn't do it. So who did it now? Well, it's the guy.
guy that I've been sitting here talking to tonight, so now I get out my puzzle pieces and I start
figuring out, okay, how do I make it so you look like a monster? I don't want to do that.
Ultimately, I'm looking for the truth. At that point, did you think about just getting up and
walking out? I didn't think about getting up and walking out because I assumed that I was going to be in
handcuffs. As soon as I stepped up, they were going to rest me.
Then something incredible happens.
The San Francisco Chronicle actually gets a message.
My name is Steve Tuscan in March.
You actually hear Denise's voice.
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Mother's dead.
He shot two men.
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I had to do what they wanted me to do.
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These mythical beings.
He saw God was talking to him.
What just made him snap?
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Terms Apply.
Aaron Quinn has just had the worst night of his life.
His 29-year-old girlfriend, Denise Huskins, has just been killed.
kidnap for ransom.
But the police are convinced the person responsible for harming her is Aaron himself.
In fact, they believe he killed her.
When they believe that Denise essentially has been murdered,
the police notify her parents and tell them that she's missing.
The detective told me to expect the worst.
And I said, wow.
So, of course, I was shaken.
He did not have one nice thing to say about Aaron.
He thought everything that was coming out of his mouth was a lie.
You don't me go tell her family that she's dead?
Because that's what I'm prepared to do.
I'm going to go tell them that I'm not looking for alive Denise.
I'm looking for dead Denise.
It did feel like I am some character in this crime drama.
I'm like in a movie.
I'm living a nightmare right now.
There's blood in your house.
There's blood?
Yeah.
Okay.
I knew there was an old stain on my sheet.
I'd watch those sheets multiple times.
multiple times.
It was just a small stain I wasn't able to get out.
Little died note, a quarter-sized blood stain
was gonna mean that was a murderer.
Because this is a kidnapping, the FBI is involved.
And an FBI agent asks Aaron if he'd be willing
to take a line detector test.
You took a polygraph.
I think if I wasn't so sleep deprived,
I would have said no, because I know that they're nonsense.
He keeps quiet.
because he wants their help in finding Denise.
All right, Aaron, there's no question in my mind that you failed this test.
And you failed it miserably.
It's not even close.
At this point, Aaron, who has not had sleep,
has this officer that is now barraging him with questions.
Tell us what happened to her.
Let's get her family closure.
I did not do anything.
Okay.
I did.
I'm pretty sure.
Maybe you didn't.
Maybe you didn't do anything.
Maybe, maybe she, something happened to her that you didn't plan.
Maybe she, I don't know.
You tell me, but it can't start with three guys showing up at the house, taking it, taking her away.
That's not what happened.
You know where she is.
I don't know where she is.
At one point, I actually started downing my own sanity.
And I thought maybe, maybe I could have a schizophrenic breakdown.
I want you guys to find her.
I don't know where she is.
He's run out of road.
He's exhausted.
He's traumatized, and he thinks that he's going to get arrested for murder.
Finally, he says, look, there's nothing more I can tell you, and I guess I need a lawyer.
I guess I need a lawyer.
We're done.
They convinced my brother to come in, and they're hoping that he can get a confession from me.
You see Ethan walk into that room with Aaron.
And Aaron just grabs onto Ethan, and he just starts sobbing.
I'm telling the truth.
I know it's the craziest thing.
I just start crying because there was someone there who actually wanted to help me.
He says, and I'm going to get you an attorney.
It's like 6.30 in the morning.
Ethan was just calling around and came up with Dan's name, Daniel Russo.
And Dan ended up being in the office already.
The phone rings. I pick it up.
He says, my name is Ethan Quinn.
My brother's being held by the loyal police.
He needs a lawyer right away.
I said, okay, I'll put my suit on.
Dan Russo is a scrappy fighter.
He's the guy you want to represent you if this happens to you.
There seems to be a stream of...
blatant lies coming out.
He's from the Bronx.
He's got a thick accent.
He says whatever he wants.
He has basically died and gone to hell.
I know the police officers, and I say, okay, is he under arrest?
Well, if he's not under rest, it's time to say, good night, Gracie.
And then I took Aaron back to the office.
And then he told me the whole story.
And it was hard to believe.
We all cried and cried.
I think the thing that really got to me was when Dan Rousseau gave us a bail bondsman card.
I never crossed my mind that he might need to be bailed out.
I told him, look, there's going to be a nightmare,
and there's no way you're going to be able to pinch yourself and wake up.
That is, unless there's some sort of proof that Denise is actually still alive.
And later that day, that is exactly.
what arrives.
At about 1230 on March 24th, something incredible happens.
The San Francisco Chronicle actually gets a message from the kidnapper with what's called
proof of life.
My name is Tuskins and kidnatch otherwise.
It's Denise's own voice, so we know that she is still alive.
And she gives information relevant to present day.
She talks about a plane crash in the Alps.
in the Alps.
An Airbus A-320 plummeting in the French Alps,
150 people now feared dead.
Earlier today, there was a plane crash in the Alps.
My other attorney Amy called and said there was a proof of life
and that the police wanted me back at the station.
I just was told by a detective an hour ago
that the boyfriend was responsible for killing her.
And now I'm saying, oh, she's alive.
They said they want to send a message back.
And they also want me to look at my phone.
The phone that they've had in their possession since I called the police a day before.
I bring out my phone and then I hear my attorney's paralegal saying,
Aaron's on airplane mode.
And of course if a device as we all know is on airplane mode, it's not receiving incoming messages.
And as soon as he takes it off airplane mode, his phone explodes in a million text messages.
Why would the police put your phone on airplane mode if that was the only means of communication from a kidnapper who has your girlfriend?
who has your girlfriend.
Exactly.
They're just leaving Denise to fend for herself.
It's not just Aaron Quinn who's being interrogated.
Police are also speaking with Denise's family.
The kinds of questions they're asking seem to insinuate
that they think this entire kidnapping might be staged.
The detective asked Jane.
Has anything bad ever happened to Denise?
I said
She was molested as a young
girl
We were camping
The others had fallen asleep
And this adult
Kept after Denise
And according to court filings
The detective responds with a shocking theory
Detective Musser tells me that
Those that have this molestation
Happen want to relive it
and experience the thrill of it again.
I was dumbstruck.
Detective Mustard has denied making this statement.
She is clearly still alive,
and rather than entertain the possibility that,
oh my gosh, maybe this story is true,
they immediately shift into, well, this must be a hoax.
This morning, a shocking twist.
Denise Huskins found safe
in Huntington Beach. They had already decided she was dead. Denise Hoskins was located safely
at an undisclosed location. It was very inconvenient for them when she showed up alive.
Desperate search for a California woman. Denise Huskins vanished from her boyfriend's home on
Mayor Island yesterday. Kidnap for ransom in the middle of the night. Miss Huskins' whereabouts are
unknown and we are treating this matter as a kidnap for ransom. Police have no
suspects. A 29-year-old woman being abducted from her boyfriend's home in the middle of the
night doesn't happen. People were terrified. This just gives me the tells us thinking about it.
Sometimes life is stranger than fiction. This was, of course, going to be a huge story.
Don't hurt her. Please don't hurt her. This morning, a shocking twist.
Denise Huskins found safe in Huntington Beach. On Wednesday, March 25th, news breaks that
Denise Huskins, who's been missing for 48 hours, reappears.
in Huntington Beach.
400 miles away from where she was kidnapped.
When Denise Huskins reappears, this story explodes.
It was so sexy.
The bizarre kidnapping case that looked like a real-life gone girl.
It was gone girl.
Nancy Grace.
Is Huskins a real-life gone girl?
Like the movie.
The movie Gone Girl is about a woman who fakes her own kidnapping.
Maticulously stage your crime scene with just enough mistakes to raise the specter of doubt.
Hinted on her husband who's cheating on her, and then leaves and allows the media to hone in on her husband.
I turn it on TV. It's on every news network.
Now to the latest twist in that kidnapping case in California.
And then it just grew and grew and grew.
Denise Huskins was located.
She is alive and well 400 miles away where her parents live.
It was everywhere.
I couldn't believe she was alive.
I mean, this is a bizarre case.
The mystery continues.
And that mystery has now become the subject of a book.
It's called Victim F.
Her kidnapper decides that there's too many police in Vallejo.
He can't take her back to Vallejo.
So he takes her to Huntington Beach where her family lives.
Stops the car.
He lets me out.
He had put tape over my eyes and given me sunglasses.
Her bags are taken out of the cartoon,
and she's instructed to count to 10 until the car drives away
and that they're going to be monitoring her.
When did you realize that you were safe?
I heard him dry off.
I slowly counted to 10
I peeled the tape off my eyes
and I was by myself
in this alley
I grabbed my bags
and I started walking and I looked
at the corner street name and I saw
Utica which is the street that I grew up on
I thought oh my God
she realizes that she's within walking distance
of her mother's house in Huntington Beach
you know it's a street
I've walked down hundreds of times in my life.
As I'm stumbling, still sedated,
just walking down the street,
all I wanted to do
was to hug my mom and dad
and finally feel safe.
She goes to her mother's house, but no one's there.
She sees someone working on the home,
and she asked to borrow a cell phone.
She first calls her dad,
and he doesn't pick up, and she leaves a voicemail.
I heard the voicemail, and then I went into a panic.
Denise's parents were both hours away up in Vallejo,
unable to get to her.
She was walking over to my house, which was a mile away,
about a 10-15-minute walk.
I'm thinking, okay, I've got about five minutes
to get a hold of Huntington Beach Police.
I get to his house, I knock on the door, nothing.
And then his neighbor says, can I help you?
And I said, I'm looking for my dad.
Denise goes to the neighbor's home and asks to use the restroom.
When I came out, there were already two officers
from Huntington Beach Police Department
and said, you know, are you Denise Haskins?
There's actually a recording of the conversation
that they had with Denise.
Where did they drop you off here?
Down in Utica.
They see a woman who's wearing sunglasses,
who appears to be very calm,
and her actual overnight bag is with her.
So I noticed you have your purse and your jacket.
How did you get that stuff?
They brought it with me.
They knew that it was my stuff.
She tells them the same crazy story
that Aaron had told the police in Vallejo.
Denise tells them everything
from waking up at 3 a.m.
to the white flashing lights,
the kidnapping and put in the trunk.
She tells them everything she can think of.
I was put in the trunk of Aaron's car,
and then he started driving.
I was in and out of consciousness.
I knew it was hours and hours.
that we were driving, I feel the car slowed down, and I realized that we're reaching our destination.
The entire time that Denise is kidnapped, she's regularly given liquid doses of benzodia.
Likely, that seems sedative that she was given the first night.
Did you ever ask him to let you go?
I asked him if he was going to hurt me. I asked him if he was going to kill me.
He had said there was no reason for that.
They also asked in that interview, you know, you were kidnapped for two days. Did they sexually assault?
you.
Were you sexually assaulted or anything on that during this?
No.
They didn't touch you or doing anything to you against your will?
No.
It's weird because it's all things considered it treated me really nice for me.
Although Denise appears to be pretty calm to the officers that are talking to her, she does
express fear, she does talk about how she's scared.
At one point she actually says that she thinks she needs to talk to a lawyer.
Our detectives are going to have to talk to you?
Yeah, I wanted to see it.
to see about talking with a lawyer first.
I continue asking for my parents.
That's all I want to do is talk to them.
You know, I'm asking, where are they?
Can they, I just really want to speak to them.
And then finally, my cousin comes in.
Hi.
Hi.
Oh, God.
Seeing someone that I know and love come in, finally,
I could finally.
finally take a deep breath.
Can you give us a couple minutes?
Thank you.
He just took control of the situation, my cousin,
and I finally felt safe.
She's left the building with a family member,
and at this time, all information is being turned over
to Vallejo PD.
We're confident that we're going to be able to piece together
in this puzzle and have a better picture of what really occurred
once we'd speak to Ms. Huskins.
The Vallejo police want to interview her as well as well as
well as the FBI. Nick, her cousin, who is the attorney, starts talking to Detective Mustard.
And the first thing that Mustard tells them is we'll give immunity to whoever confesses first
to like making this whole thing up, basically. And today's just like, what? Detective Mustard
has denied making this offer. And it becomes very clear to her very quickly that she is
actually in a legally precarious situation. It was obvious that I needed to get a defense attorney.
And the FBI wanted to give her a courtesy flight on their plane.
I said, absolutely not.
You make sure she gets on a commercial flight,
and I want her to go directly from the airport to my office.
Meanwhile, what's being portrayed to the media is Denise isn't cooperating.
We have a plane ready to get her.
She turned it down.
We have not heard from Ms. Huskins.
And they say we've lost contact with her.
And we are no longer in contact with any of the family members.
And so the nature of the press conference turns very quickly.
From this point forward, I would not refer to them.
as a victim or a witness.
It was very clear that the only people being investigated were Aaron and Denise.
Police say the kidnapping was a hoax.
I was mentally preparing myself for a fight, and it would have to be a fight to the death.
Every moment, every ounce of energy is about how do I live to see another second.
The story is so incredible.
Vallejo police didn't believe it.
This morning, a shocking twist.
Denise Huskins found safe in Huntington Beach.
The whole premise of it is that the two of them were lying
and that this kidnapping never happened.
He said, oh, she just wants to be another gone girl.
She read the book, saw the movie.
The last thing that you're thinking about is,
if I do survive, I need to make sure that I'm believable.
I had gone from a murderer to me a hope.
It was very clear that the only people being investigated were Aaron and Denise.
Picking up the pieces of our life, one by one by one, all the while being in a constant state of terror,
knowing that the kidnappers are out there.
And knowing that people think that you're liars.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
My name is Misty Caruso.
I am a sergeant at the Alameda County Sheriff's Office.
Before I became a detective, I was obsessed with watching 2020.
Tonight on 2020.
I like watching how the detectives worked and how they solved the crimes.
It was always so intriguing to me.
In March of 2015, I remember hearing about this Gone Girl case.
Kidnap Forensum.
Found safe this morning and still the same questions remain.
And then I had seen Valleopiope.
press conference. The same day that Denise is released, Lieutenant Kenny Park with the Vallejo
Police Department had an extraordinary press conference.
Lieutenant Kenny Park comes out and he starts by thanking reporters for being there.
I really appreciate your time coming in. The Vallejo Police issued a press release even before
that press conference, basically saying it was an orchestrated event. So the reporters were already
geared up for this to be a lot of drama at this press conference. The statement that Mr.
provided was such an incredible story. We initially had a hard time believing it. And upon further
investigation, we were not able to substantiate any of the things that he was saying. As soon as
King Park started talking, I knew that they were going to go after us. From this point forward,
I would not refer to them as a victim or a witness. I just remember thinking, this is insane.
He was angry. I had gone from a murderer to now committing a hoax.
Lieutenant Park never outright called Aaron Quinn or Denise Husskins liars.
He never used the word hoax.
But if you listen to the entire press conference, the whole premise of it is that the two of them were lying and that this kidnapping never happened.
The fact that we've essentially wasted all of these resources for really nothing is upsetting.
And I'm thinking to myself, how could you say that?
You have no idea.
No one's investigating.
This is before they've even spoken to her.
This is the same day that she's released by the kidnapper.
Mr. Quinn and Ms. Huskins has plundered valuable resources away from our community.
It is Mr. Quinn and Ms. Huskins that owes this community and apology.
I'm sitting, watching the newscasts, knowing that she's alive.
And then they insult her by saying that her and Aaron, oh, the,
Everyone in apology?
I was aghast.
Police officers don't go on camera and give press conferences unless they're certain about what they're saying.
To hear the reporters just go with his version of the story without him
when reporters asked if Denise I were facing charges.
There are still some loose ends that we need to tie up.
And at the conclusion of the investigation, if you feel that there is sufficient evidence to move forward,
We will be requesting criminal charges.
So Denise has no idea that this has happened
because while the press conference is going on,
she's making her way from Huntington Beach
where she was released up to the San Francisco area
to meet her attorney.
The plane lands in San Francisco at 9.30 at night.
And I walk into my defense attorney, Doug Rappaport, his office.
And one of the first things he says,
when I sit down, he's like, look,
Flaio, police, they just held a press conference
and completely threw you under the bus.
What do you have to say about it?
I'm not somebody who just automatically believes my clients.
I would be a fool if I did.
And that's why I met with her,
and I went through the story repeatedly with her.
When she was going through the story,
the emotion was so real.
Not only were the facts consistent,
but I remember the most telling fact
was when she was taken to the house.
and she was bound. She had been in the trunk for hours.
He was awkwardly trying to get me out of the trunk.
When he grabbed me, he stumbled, he fell.
He pulled you into a garage.
He just drug me, and it was a cold, a really cold concrete floor.
He put a blanket over me and said he had to go inside and clean.
She heard him cleaning inside and thought he's a mass murderer
and he's cleaning up from the last victim,
and that I'm gonna die.
In your book, Victim F, you write about a promise
that you made yourself in that moment.
I told myself, no matter what they do,
no matter what they put me through,
I'm not gonna bang and scream.
If it is the last moment that I'm gonna be living,
I'm just gonna stay calm and be grateful for the life I had.
I was absolutely convinced that she was
telling the truth.
By the time she meets with her lawyer and she's in a safe space, she's able to actually
give the complete details of what happened.
She told me that she did not tell the officers two things because he told her, do not mention
these two things, and she was petrified of this person.
One that he was in the Marines and two, that she had been raped.
So that first day in captivity, he says we have a problem because this wasn't intended
for you. We don't have anything on you to make sure that you comply. So one of us is going
to have to have sex with you. And it'll be recorded to make sure that you don't go to the police.
And if we think that you are going to go to the police, we will air it on the internet.
He acted remorseful and hesitant, like he didn't want to do this. I shared with him about
being molested as a child and thinking some bit of him will just go, okay, I'm, I will, I
won't do this to her.
But that didn't happen, no.
During the course of those two days,
he did rape her and videotape it.
And not just once.
No.
Her kidnapper tells her that the group
has decided the recording doesn't look believable enough.
They have to do it again.
He had told me it doesn't look consensual.
So this time, we'll have to kiss
and we'll have to make it look like you're enjoying it.
It's an unthinkable thing to go through to be raped,
but then to have to act like you're enjoying it.
You know, I had to do and say things that I would with Aaron.
It's cruel.
It's cruel.
It's beyond cruel.
It's a certain level of torture.
After two days of Denise feeling like her life is being held in the balance every moment,
her kidnapper comes to her and says, I'm going to release you.
That was always the plan.
But as the clock was ticking, I realized that if that 48 hours came and went, and it didn't happen, I was mentally preparing myself for a fight, and it would have to be a fight to the death.
And he woke me up, he said it was around 2 a.m. and that he was going to drive me down to Huntington Beach where my family lives.
And then I just was in and out of consciousness.
He stops the car, and before he pulls me out, he says that my strength is admirable,
and he really wishes that we would have met under different circumstances.
But the police seem to have already decided that Denise's harrowing story isn't true.
Nothing but a hoax.
It is possible she could face criminal charges.
And that's about to draw the ire of someone unexpected, the kidnapper.
The San Francisco Chronicle receives another email.
Here was a guy trying to defend his victims.
It just got more and more surreal.
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Is there any evidence that makes you know conclusively that this was all at home?
Our investigation has concluded
that none of the claims has been substantiated.
And I can go one step further to say this,
that this was not a random act,
and that the members of our community are safe,
and that they have nothing to fear.
Police say the kidnapping was a hoax.
An orchestrated hoax according to officials.
Denise Huskins purported orchestrator of this possible kidnapping hoax.
You can't fathom that at least would be this aggressive
with nothing to back it up.
For a minute, I thought maybe Denise made it up.
Maybe because of how I heard Denise in the past, maybe she was trying to get back at me.
The fact that I even thought for a moment that Denise made this up was like, it's something I'll carry with me until the day I die.
I was at my criminal defense attorneys at, you know, 10 o'clock at night until 5 the next morning.
During the course of that evening, I'd been talking with the Vallejo Police Department and trying to get a sexual assault exam.
They said, you know, we need to speak to her first.
We'll talk to her tomorrow, and then we'll determine whether or not we'll set up that exam.
And according to court filings, when Denise's attorney asked for that exam, Vallejo Police initially disregarded that request.
I said, we have evidence that's going to dissipate.
You're going to lose your DNA.
You're going to lose, you know, fibers.
And they said, well, in the most callous thing, I think I've ever heard somebody's saying,
say from law enforcement, they said, well, just have her sleep in her clothes and don't take
a shower and we'll talk about it in the morning.
Vallejo has denied this account.
And my attorney told me, you know, you don't have to speak with the police, but the only
way that we're going to catch this guy and the people who are involved is if you speak to them.
Denise does go in to speak with law enforcement.
She has two days where she endures questioning after having experienced such a traumatic event.
The first day I was questioned by the Vallejo lease, and then the second day the lead FBI agent took over.
And with his questioning, it was very different.
They spoke to her just like any other suspect.
There wasn't one time, I think, where they showed any real compassion or understanding.
And that's because they believed that she was a criminal.
It seemed like that FBI agent's main goal was only to trip me.
up. And he made me go through the assaults again. What position I was put in, what his body felt
like. And at the end of it, he basically says, you know, are you sure, is there anything else
you want to say because it's a crime to lie to an FBI agent? They basically threatened her. They
said, you can be prosecuted. The FBI agent told me after we concluded Denise's interview that he was
99% certain that she was lying. And he told my attorney, you should watch the movie Gone Girl.
I'd explain a lot.
When they started calling her Gone Girl, I was shocked.
He said, oh, she just wants to be another Gone Girl.
She read the book, saw the movie.
And I thought, well, what does that mean?
I had heard of the book and the movie.
I hadn't seen it, and I had no clue.
The new twist in what some call the real-life Gone Girl.
The story is being compared to the movie Gone Girl,
where a beautiful woman takes her own kidnapping.
She is not the Gone Girl.
She's a responsible person.
Once you've been through the trauma you've been through, no one would expect to be disbelieved.
And you go through something like that.
And every moment, every ounce of energy is about how do I live to see another second?
That is all you can think about.
The last thing that you're thinking about is, if I do survive, I need to make sure that I'm believable.
On Thursday, March 26th, the San Francisco Chronicle,
receives another email and it is filled with details about the kidnapping. The author of the email
writes, it isn't a hoax. They're not lying. They'd seen the headlines apparently where
Denise and Aaron are being blamed and saying that they made the whole thing up and they're basically
like, no, telling the truth because we did it. The kidnapper, the guy who invaded their home
and raped her, was offended that the Leo police department would say,
It was all a hoax.
It just got more and more surreal.
The kidnapper wanted credit.
Yes.
I do believe they wanted clear our names, but they also wanted credit for their work.
There was also a level of arrogance that I could look how clever we are.
Not only are there explicit details about the kidnapping, but they attach photos of evidence
showing even the room that Denise Haskins was held in.
Pictures of the squirt gun with a laser thing duct taped on it to make it look like that's
what the red dots were.
It describes crimes that they had committed
on Mary Island leading up to the kidnapping.
They started out as car thieves,
but they weren't making enough money.
And then they started getting into this kidnapping
for ransom.
They call themselves Ocean's 11 gentlemen criminals.
Why do this?
Why not do it?
They probably thought they write George Clean, Brad Pitt.
Moreover, the emails came to the Chronicle
while Denise was being interviewed.
You would think that was a fact that would vindicate her,
or at least let law enforcement think,
aha, there may be something else going on here.
While all of this is going on,
you two haven't seen each other yet.
We're talking, and I tell him that I'm still in the Bay Area.
We made a plan to have him come,
and so we could see each other.
It was just sick with anticipation,
wondering what he thinks of me.
Is there any bit of him that thinks that I'm this,
horrible liar, who would do something like this to him.
I just wanted to see her.
I just wanted to hold her.
I just want to tell her I was sorry.
And I was really afraid that she wouldn't want to see me,
that she would just want to wipe her hands clean.
And in captivity, I kept picturing him.
I kept just visualizing.
what that feeling must be like to finally feel safe in his arms again.
And so when he knocked on that door and I open it,
I mean, we just embraced and, like, we're just crying and holding each other.
I knew our lives had changed forever and that we're kind of go through a lot more struggles,
but, like, we're together.
At least you had each other at that point.
Yeah, at least at each other now.
A little more than two months after this, there was a home invasion in Dublin, California.
County emergency.
Finally, Aaron and Denise's story is about to get a big shot of believability.
They are out there right now, and I have been fighting with them.
When the Dublin incident happened, I said, that's a wrap.
As the weeks pass, with no breaks in their case, Denise and Aaron find themselves the prime
suspects in their own home invasion and abduction.
The nightmare in many ways is just getting started for Denise and for Aaron.
They believe that they're not safe, that whoever is responsible for the burglary and
Denise's abduction is still out there.
And police certainly are no longer looking for those people.
We were picking up the pieces of our life, one by one by one, all the while being in a constant state of terror.
I was about to get fired for my job.
They were looking for, I believe, for any reason, to fire me because they didn't want my bad reputation tainting them.
It plants a seed in people's minds to doubt us.
Everything we worked hard for, it just got wiped away.
And I became this vision of everything that people.
want to hate. I was an object
to throw stones at. It was devastating
to see both of them. They could not
function. Were you concerned that you were going to be
arrested and charged? Yeah, I mean that, yeah, that's
that was the plan. We were preparing for a defense.
But there's about to be a very big break
in the case, which will change everything.
On June 5, 2015, I received
a call about a home invasion robbery that
just incurred, being in the city of Dublin.
Dublin is a small California town.
It's about an hour south of Vallejo.
An older couple wakes up during the middle of the night
to a bright flashlight shining in their faces.
The wife had reported seeing a laser also being pointed at her.
It's this exact same thing that happened to Aaron and Denise,
only this time things go awry pretty quickly.
When he attempts to tie up the wife,
the husband jumps across the bed and tackles the suspect.
The wife is able to slip away and go to the bathroom and call 911.
County emergency.
We have a break in.
They are out there right now.
My husband's fighting with them.
I just broke loose.
I won't hide in the bathroom right now.
When I'm seven three, one and seven, four.
You tell my husband fighting with a subject.
Stand by.
Is that subject that's fighting still in the house?
The suspect tries to get away.
He, in turn, hits the husband right side of the head
with a maglight style of flashlights.
He signed a flashlight and ex his house.
He ran away already.
He ran away.
Okay, my husband is bleeding.
He had a pretty good head injury, but he fought this man
and essentially chased him out.
Well, in the struggle, the kidnapper
wound up leaving a cell phone.
Law enforcement was able to quickly find out
who the owner of this cell phone was.
And it comes back to a woman in Orangevale, California.
So when we reached out to her,
She had told us that her son, Matthew Muller, lost his phone the day before.
They learned some pretty astonishing things about Matthew Mueller.
He joined the Marine Corps for five years, and he actually was discharged honorably as a sergeant.
He graduated summa cum laude from Pomona College out here in California.
He had a number of years of military experience, so that set him apart from most of our classmates.
Certainly prioritized his studies over his social life.
and then went to, of all places, Harvard Law School.
You don't get into Harvard Law without being some combination of smart and hardworking,
and he was very clearly both.
He went into immigration law, he got married.
He had this very successful life that was just getting started.
Mueller claims that in 2008 he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder,
and by 2015, his life was kind of falling apart.
He'd been disbarred by the California State Bar for failing to return $1,200 to a client.
He'd been separated from his wife.
When we reached out with mother, she just told us where he was at.
That was in their family cabin in South Lake Tahoe.
They had located the suspect of the home invasion.
They were going to serve a search warrant.
Misty Carousou was still a day away from officially being a detective.
But when her boss called and asked her if she'd like to go to South Lake Tahoe for one of their cases for a search, she said, sure, I'm there.
The house was your typical cabin in the woods.
The house looked quiet.
It didn't look like there was anybody home.
We all lined up tactically and walked up to the front door.
We kicked down the door.
The place was cluttered.
As we make our way across all the debris,
we see Matthew Mueller coming out from one of the bedrooms.
And then we asked him, do you know why we're here?
He said yes.
When I went to take pictures of him,
he was just shut down.
want to talk, just like a blank stare.
They start doing a search of the house, and Misty, from the minute she walked in, she was just
getting a very creepy feeling about the place.
There were a lot of ski mask.
There were a few stun guns.
We did recover a number of laptops, cell phones.
There was one specific laptop that was stuffed in between the mattress and the box
ring of his bed.
He was driving a stolen Ford Mustang.
We opened the trunk, and there was a large green bag that had a blow-up doll in it.
It was kind of stuffed in there, but it had very rigid wires that allowed it to be erect on its own.
It had zip ties, duct tape.
There were a number of replica squirt guns.
One of them had specifically just your typical pen-style laser pointer that was duct-taped to it.
There were several swim goggles that were duct-tape black.
One in particular had a blonde hair strand attached to the duct tape.
The Dublin Home Invasion, none of them had blonde hair.
She knows something isn't right.
She knows that something bad happened to someone, but she doesn't know who.
This can't be the first time this person's done this,
and she's going to find out what else Matthew Mueller has done.
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After the break-in in Dublin, Detective Misty Caruso doggedly pursues this.
At that point, there was enough evidence tying him to their crime.
She could have stopped right there, and nobody would have faulted her for it because they had this case closed.
But she just couldn't get it out of her head that this had happened to someone else.
Looking back at all the evidence, there was just no denying that this wasn't his first-time committee in crime.
I just had to figure out where these other crimes occurred.
She puts Matthew Muller's name into the police database,
and he comes back as having been a person of interest
in a string of unsolved crimes in nearby cities.
There were two incidents from 2009
in the neighboring cities of Palo Alto and Mountain View,
where Mueller was listed as a person of interest.
In both cases, a man broke in in the middle of the night,
bound the female victims, covered their eyes,
and threatened to rape.
him.
We believed at the time that those two cases may be linked and may have been committed by the
same suspect.
They just hadn't been able to charge him.
There was also the recovered stolen Mustang.
And Misty tracks down the owner of the white Mustang.
And it turns out he's a college student who lived on Mare Island.
He mentioned that there was a kidnapping that had occurred at the same time that his vehicle
was stolen. A kidnapping case that was labeled a hoax by Valleopi. And it caught my interest.
I googled the Vallejo kidnapping case and all of the Gone Girl stuff came up.
Police are investigating whether those kidnappers were well imaginary. And I saw the Vallejo PD
lieutenant in his press conference. It is Mr. Quinn and Ms. Huskins that owes this community an
apology. It all came back to me and I thought this is beyond crazy. She wants to
talk to Vallejo, she can't get a call back. She finally reaches them and like, well,
you got to talk to the FBI. And she calls the FBI. I said, I have this suspect in custody
who may be a person of interest to you in the Vallejo kidnapping case that you guys deemed a
hoax. And he told me that it wasn't the FBI saying that it was a hoax and that it was
Valleopi that said it was a hoax. And they came pretty quickly after that. There was one
representative from Vileo PD and then there was two FBI agents that came to our station as well.
And when we showed them the pictures of the evidence we had, they were shocked. They were shocked.
Lo and behold, all of these details that Aaron and Denise had told them had happened are now being
corroborated. And it turns out it's not so bizarre that, you know, this is, in fact, what happened.
So three months later, you get a call from your attorney that investigators want to talk to you
again? Yes. And they tell me that they think they caught the guy. Did they tell you his name?
No. They told me very little detail. They said they had found my computer at the place. They had
found a goggle with long blonde hair. I just realized, like, our whole lives can,
change. When they found the Mustang and the laptop, it was like, you know, the sun breaking. I mean,
that's so cliche, but that's what it really felt like. They had executed a search warrant on the
residence that we found out was in Lake Tahoe, which made sense because Denise said she was in the
car, you know, held in the trunk for a couple hours while they were driving there. Everything
looked exactly as Denise had described it.
You said, Daddy, the kidnapper has been found.
And they found evidence that connects them to the kidnapping.
And I said, what?
Like, what did they find?
You found this car that had GPS on it.
We had to identify where the car had been.
And later, we find, after we're doing research into the Vallejo case, one address in particular
was East Utica Avenue in Huntington, the exact area where Denise was dropped.
The news breaks immediately and its headlines all over the world.
Major break in a strange kidnapping case in California.
Well, this case may have finally come together.
How did this case take yet another surprising turn?
Good afternoon, everyone.
Today is a fabulous day.
We held the press conference and I said, you know, we're expecting full apologies.
are hoping that Vallejo PD steps up to the plate.
It was really joyful to go out there and trumpet his innocence.
I remember they were squeezing each other's hands so tightly
throughout the entire press conference.
Dan Russo and Doug Rappaport are taking turns back and forth
just pummeling the Vallejo Police Department.
Had you asked some very important basic questions,
which Vallejo Police Department,
it just completely went over their head.
I mean, there were just so many factors that they could have looked to to determine that, geez, maybe that Denise and Aaron are telling the truth.
But no, they were so stuck in supporting their snap judgment.
At that press conference, I knew that I was not going to look down.
I was going to try to look every reporter in the eye so they could see me too.
You know, I'm not just a picture. I'm not just a name.
She wanted them to know without words that she wasn't a liar.
Here I am, this really happened to me.
They're absolutely 100%, positively, unequivocally, not just not guilty, but innocent.
That moment was vindication.
To a certain degree, bittersweet.
They were now coming out the other side.
There are so many questions for the Vallejo Police Department about how they got this so very wrong.
They catch the perpetrator, but they say he acted alone, even though Aaron and Denise know that there were other people there that night.
It just would have been impossible to have been done with just one guy.
Mueller was charged in federal court in Sacramento, California, with the kidnapping for ransom of Denise Huskins.
What he wasn't charged with were the sexual assaults. The reason being is that there was no jurisdiction
in federal court for those crimes. It's still part of me that wants him to tell us what really
happened. I think there's more to it. Aaron and Denise know there were other people there that
night. There was things that happened that we saw, that we heard. It just would have been impossible
to have been done with just one guy.
There's other people out there.
That's something that we've had to live with.
I somehow make peace with that.
When the indictment is unsealed,
we never see Lieutenant Kenny Park on camera again.
He's still working as a PIO for the Vallejo
for the Vallejo Police Department.
They serve up Captain John Whitney
to answer reporters' questions.
My ABC News colleague Cecilia Vega was there among the reporters grilling Captain Whitney.
So does the department still stand by the statements that it made so publicly four months ago
that this was a hoax that wasted valuable city resources?
Yes, but we're also continuing to investigate it.
Does the Vallejo Police Department owe this couple an apology?
We're going to evaluate that when the investigation is complete and then go from there.
There are so many questions for the Vallejo Police Department.
If they had been investigating what Aaron was telling them, if they had looked at his phone
and made sure that it wasn't on airplane mode, maybe they could have gotten to Denise sooner.
The kidnappers did call Aaron's phone three times around 8.30 that Monday night, right
before Mustard was going to interrogate Aaron.
He voluntarily gave him his phone and they put it on airplane mode, even though he told
him the kidnapper is going to call me on this phone.
You never cut off lines of communication to a perpetrator, ever.
Every communication that came in and out of that phone should have been tracked.
They actually did have the evidence that could have led them, if not to rescue me, at least
afterwards, to go to his exact location.
Maybe they could have prevented what happened to the couple in Dublin, California.
The Vallejo Police Department publicly threw you under the bus.
So when the truth comes out, you were telling the truth the whole time.
Did they ever say I'm sorry?
The city attorneys wrote a letter of apology that the chief of police signed.
The letter in part says it is now clear that there was a kidnapping on March 23, 2015,
that it was not a hoax or orchestrated event.
It also admits that the words that Lieutenant Kenny Park spoke during that press conference
were harsh and offensive.
A private apology though, not a public one.
Yes.
I run you over with my car, right?
And, you know, I send you a new pair of shoelaces.
You know, it just doesn't work.
You know, it's totally absurd.
So I was happy they sued the city.
Aaron and Denise filed a civil rights lawsuit,
alleging a number of claims, including defamation.
When Lieutenant Park falsely accused Aaron and Denise
of faking the kidnapping, the police department
did not have all of the information they needed.
You can have a theory, but your theory should not survive contact
with the first contrary facts.
You have to adjust.
And it's fine for people to make mistakes.
To not accept it and acknowledge it,
I cannot understand why that's not something that they don't seem willing to do.
When we asked about that apology, the city of Alejo sent back a statement.
It says in part the case was not publicly handled with the type of sensitivity
a case of this nature should have been handled with.
And now, six years later, the current police chief, Shawnee Williams, writing,
I would like to extend my deepest apology to Ms. Huskins and Mr. Quinn
for how they were treated during this ordeal.
But at the time, the department had a very different response.
Unbelievably, the lead detective on this case, Detective Matt Mustard, is named Officer of the Year.
For 2015, the year of this case.
I thought, boy, he blew it big time in this case, so he must have done a fabulous job in some other case to make up for it.
Your new book is called Victim F.
Why'd you pick that name?
When the FBI agents were writing the affidavit for the rest of Matthew Mueller,
they asked us specifically, do you want your names in it?
And typically in affidavits like that,
victims remain anonymous because of the sensitive and violent nature
of the crime.
But we weren't anonymous, and we said, of course, yes,
we can't rebuild our lives until people can see the truth.
I was victim F for female victim.
Erin was a victim M for male victim.
And when the affidavit was made public, we were still victim F and victim M.
We requested interviews with the Vallejo Police Department, Detective Matt Mustard, and Lieutenant Kenney Park, as well as the FBI.
But we did not hear back.
Ultimately, Aaron and Denise settled their civil suit against Vallejo, Detective Mustard, and Lieutenant Park for $2.5 million with no party admitting any wrongdoing.
There will be a sentencing hearing, and then Aaron and Denise get their chance to read their victim impact statements.
You actually were staring him down face to face.
What was that moment like?
On March 16th, 2017, almost exactly two years.
after their harrowing experience, Denise and Aaron come face-to-face with Matthew Mueller at his sentencing hearing.
Matthew Mueller entered a plea of guilty. He received a 40-year sentence.
Denise got up to give her victim impact statements.
Denise Huskins was so brave. She said to the judge, Your Honor, for healing purposes,
I'm going to address Matthew Mueller directly.
You actually were staring him down face-to-face.
Yeah, I mean, for those days in captivity, I was.
blindfolded, I never saw his face, never looked me in the eye, and I was going to make sure
that he was going to.
Now we meet face to face, eye to eye.
I am Denise Heskins, the woman behind the blindfold.
I'm not victim meth, the real-life gone girl, a hoaxer, just a body to take, a random
life.
No, I am none of those things.
I am Denise Haskins.
this all happened, many people, my friends and family members said, well, are they going to stick together?
Have they broken up?
I go, they're never going to break up.
No one's going to understand what they went through except each other.
Tell me what your wedding day was like?
Her wedding was just a perfect day.
Everyone had supported us over the last few years were there.
All our attorneys were there.
Including the detective who linked him to our case.
Missy Cruz soon.
It was beautiful.
The impact that I had made to these people I didn't even know is a very overwhelming
emotional feeling.
You just never know how you're going to impact people based off of the things that you
do.
That was the officiant at their wedding.
It was a tremendous honor to be asked.
The sun was shining, glistening off the ocean.
Everybody was happy.
I'm not a big wedding guy.
I don't like to show emotion other than anger.
I'm very good at showing anger.
But it was a very emotional thing.
It's a lot of laughters and a lot of tears.
Dirk's Bentley, Riser, was our first song.
It's very much about overcoming tragedy and rising, like a phoenix rising from the ashes.
It's kind of become an anthem for you.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, I can't talk about it.
Look at you now.
You got married.
You have a little girl.
She was born five years to the day of my release
from the kidnapping.
It just was an incredible, just like, rebirth.
like rebirth, you know, life just coming full circle.
Have you thought about what you will tell your daughter one day about any of this?
I'll tell her everything, although a lot of what we wrote about in the book is tragic
and sad. It is actually really our love story, and there is a happy ending, and it's her.
One thing especially that I'd want her to know, Erin and I went through a lot of therapy
afterwards. But it's still, you know, I still felt like there was a little something missing,
like I just wasn't quite the same and wondering maybe, well, I ever really feel whole and
complete again. I just feel like she just completed me, that little piece that was still
broken and missing. So she's given me more than she could ever know. And I do want her to know
that.
You've been listening to the 2020 True Crime Vault.
Friday nights at 9 on ABC, you can also find all new broadcast episodes of 2020.
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