News
2don MSN
Matthew Muller, whose 2015 kidnapping of Denise Huskins was chronicled in the Netflix docuseries "American Nightmare," was ...
A judge sentenced Matthew Muller to life without parole, compounding other criminal convictions around California.
22h
Local News Matters on MSN‘American Nightmare’ kidnapper sentenced for separate 2015 San Ramon abductionA MAN WHOSE ABDUCTION of a Vallejo woman led to the “American Nightmare” Netflix documentary series was sentenced to at least seven more years in prison for a separate case involving the kidnapping of ...
Dateline shows one of the most debated cases of kidnapping in recent American history in its chapter titled Twisted Tale.
Muller was convicted in connection with a home invasion that took place just weeks after the kidnapping that become the focus of the true crime TV series.
Denise Huskins in ‘American Nightmare.’ (Netflix) After being missing for nearly 48 hours, Denise’s kidnapper told her that she was being released.
Denise Huskins and Aaron Quinn. Mike Jory/AP. Muller, 44, would plead guilty in 2016 to one count of federal kidnapping. He was sentenced to 40 years in prison.
Aaron Quinn and Denise Huskins awoke in the middle of the night to hear a voice say 'This is a robbery.' They reflect on the terrifying ordeal, police naming them as suspects, and their vindication.
Here is what we know so far about the case: The Alleged Abduction. On the afternoon of March 23, Quinn, 30, called 911 to report that Huskins had been abducted from his Vallejo, California, home ...
Police in Vallejo, California, said on Wednesday they found "no evidence to support the claims" that Denise Huskins was abducted from a home there before she was found alive two days later and ...
O ne night in March 2015, Denise Huskins and her boyfriend Aaron Quinn awoke to a scene of brutal confusion. Someone had broken into Quinn’s home in Mare Island, a peninsula in Vallejo ...
Denise Huskins and Aaron Quinn, the Vallejo couple police accused of making up their home invasion and kidnapping is responding to an apology made by the department more than six years later.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results