By Cris Alarcon, InEDC Writer. March 29, 2026)
Break in the Case: A 2024 Prison Interview
In November 2024, Pierson, along with an FBI interviewer, traveled to an Arizona prison where Muller is serving a 40-year federal sentence. During that interview, Muller disclosed previously unknown crimes spanning decades.
Among the revelations:
- A 1993 kidnapping and sexual assault committed when Muller was 16
- Home invasions in 2009 in Palo Alto and Mountain View
- A previously undisclosed break-in just weeks after the 2015 Vallejo kidnapping
That last detail prompted investigators to revisit physical evidence. Muller described using a ladder to enter a home—raising the possibility that evidence could still exist years later.
Following the confessions, prosecutors in Santa Clara and Contra Costa counties filed new charges. By 2025, Muller received additional life sentences tied to these cases.
Revisiting a Discredited Investigation
The original 2015 case drew national attention after Vallejo police publicly labeled the kidnapping a “Gone Girl” hoax, referencing the novel and film Gone Girl.
While Huskins was still missing, Quinn was interrogated for nearly 18 hours and accused of murder. When Huskins resurfaced alive two days later, authorities doubled down on claims the incident was staged.
Pierson has sharply criticized that approach, calling it rooted in “pseudoscience” and confirmation bias.
He has since demonstrated how investigators prematurely focused on Quinn without evidence, contrasting those tactics with modern, science-based interviewing methods.
How the Case Was Actually Solved
The breakthrough came in June 2015 in Dublin, when Muller fled a home invasion and left behind his cellphone.
Misty Carausu traced the device to Muller and identified similarities between that crime and the Vallejo kidnapping.
A subsequent search of Muller’s cabin near South Lake Tahoe uncovered critical evidence, including Quinn’s stolen laptop and DNA linking Huskins to the location.
Muller later pleaded guilty and, in 2017, was sentenced to 40 years in federal prison. Additional state convictions in 2022 added 31 years to his sentence.
Accountability and Reform
In 2018, Huskins and Quinn reached a $2.5 million settlement with the City of Vallejo over a defamation lawsuit tied to the “hoax” claims. The agreement did not include an admission of liability.
A formal apology from Vallejo police came three years later in 2021, when then-Chief Shawny Williams called the couple’s treatment “horrific and evil.”
Pierson has since partnered with Huskins and Quinn to promote reforms in law enforcement interviewing practices, advocating for evidence-based techniques to prevent victim misclassification.
Survivors Recognized for Persistence
In 2025, the California District Attorneys Association honored Huskins and Quinn as “Witnesses of the Year,” recognizing their persistence in pursuing justice long after the case appeared closed.
Their experience has also reached a broader audience through the Netflix docuseries American Nightmare, which revisits the investigation and its failures.
A Case That Continues to Reshape Policing
What began as a widely discredited kidnapping report has evolved into a case study in investigative failure—and reform.
Through renewed efforts led by Pierson and the determination of survivors, authorities have now linked Muller to a broader pattern of violent crimes that might otherwise have remained hidden.
For El Dorado County officials, the case underscores the importance of persistence, jurisdictional collaboration, and adherence to evidence over assumption.
- March 23: Matthew Muller breaks into Aaron Quinn’s Vallejo home at 3:00 AM, drugging the couple and abducting Denise Huskins.
- March 23–24: Quinn is interrogated by Vallejo Police for 18 hours. Detectives accuse him of murdering Huskins despite his detailed account of the “wetsuit” kidnapper.
- March 25: Muller releases Huskins in Huntington Beach, 400 miles away.
- March 25 (Night): Vallejo PD spokesperson Lt. Kenny Park holds a press conference calling the case a “wild goose chase” and a “Gone Girl” hoax.
- June 5: Muller attempts a similar home invasion in Dublin, CA, but leaves his cellphone behind.
- June 8: Detective Misty Carausu links the phone to Muller and discovers evidence of the Huskins kidnapping at his Tahoe cabin.
- June 29: The FBI arrests Muller. Vallejo PD is forced to privately apologize to the couple, though they do not do so publicly.
- Sept 2016: Muller pleads guilty to federal kidnapping charges.
- March 2017: Muller is sentenced to 40 years in federal prison.
- March 2018: Huskins and Quinn win a $2.5 million settlement from the City of Vallejo for defamation.
- March 2022: Muller is sentenced to an additional 31 years in state prison for the sexual assault of Huskins.
- Nov 2024: DA Vern Pierson and the FBI interview Muller in prison. Muller confesses to a 1993 cold case and 2009 home invasions.
- Jan 2024: The Netflix docuseries American Nightmare premieres, bringing international scrutiny to the Vallejo PD.
- March 2025: DA Vern Pierson honors Huskins and Quinn with the “Witness of the Year” award for their advocacy in reforming police interview tactics.







