Matthew Muller

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Matthew Muller
Born
Matthew Daniel Muller

1976 or 1977 (age 46–47)[1]
Alma materBella Vista High School

Pomona College (BS)

Harvard Law School (JD)
Known for'Gone Girl' kidnapping
Criminal statusPlead guilty; plead no contest
Criminal chargeKidnapping, burglary, forcible rape, battery, assault, false imprisonment
Penalty31 years and 40 years, served concurrently
Date apprehended
June 9, 2015
Imprisoned atFederal Correctional Institution, Tucson

Matthew Muller (born 1976 or 1977) is an American kidnapper, former immigration attorney, and Marine veteran. He is known for carrying out the kidnapping in Vallejo, California referred to in the media as the 'Gone Girl' kidnapping, as later depicted in the Netflix docuseries American Nightmare.

Muller is a decorated United States Marine Corps veteran. He was honorably discharged after developing mental health issues in the Middle East. He was a Harvard-educated immigration lawyer who gained prominence after he halted a deportation by using an online petition. He was voted one of the American Bar Association's "Techiest Lawyers."

Muller was diagnosed with bipolar disorder with psychotic features and schizophrenia. His mental health cost him his career and in 2015, his delusions developed into the belief he should engage in vigilante justice against the wealthy to give to the poor.

He committed two home invasions and kidnapped and raped Denise Huskins, originally deemed a hoax by authorities, during his psychosis. He was caught on June 9, 2015 after leaving his cell phone at the second home invasion. He is being held in Federal Correctional Institution, Tucson until 2049.

Early life and military service[edit]

Muller grew up in the suburbs of Sacramento.[2] His mother is Joyce, a middle school English teacher, and his father is Monty, a school administrator who served as a wrestling coach. He has one younger brother, Kent. His parents divorced his senior year of high school after an affair.[2] Muller was introverted and bullied for being overweight growing up; he was also known as someone who "fought for the underdog".[2]. He played the trumpet in his Fair Oaks, California high school band, participated in computer club, and earned over a 3.8 GPA taking high achiever coursework.[3][2][4]

In 1995,[5] he enlisted in the United States Marine Corps to get in shape and to earn money to attend college.[2] He played trumpet in the United States Marine Band across the world, including Australia, Abu Dhabi, and the United Arab Emirates.[4][2][6][7] While stationed in Okinawa, Japan, Muller started a nonprofit to teach locals about the internet[2] and worked at an off-base bilingual newspaper.[6][7]

In 1999, he was deployed to train soldiers in the Middle East where he became a decorated marine. He earned several medals, including a National Defense Service Medal,[8] the Sea Service Deployment Ribbon, the Good Conduct Medal, and the Nave—Marine Corps Achievement Medal. He was promoted to a sergeant.[2][7][4][9] Muller developed severe mental health issues he referred to as Gulf War syndrome, despite never having been in combat.[10][2] He requested a discharge, which was granted, honorably.[2] While serving, Muller said he witnessed discrimination and harassment against fellow marines who were suspected of not being heterosexual.[11] He served for four years.[8]

Muller is fluent in English, Spanish, Russian and German.[7] He married a woman he met while studying abroad Prague; she filed for divorced in December 2012. He remarried while incarcerated in Sacramento County Jail.[2]

Education[edit]

Muller graduated from Bella Vista High School in 1995.[7]

Muller attended a community college and transferred to Pomona College.[6][2] In 2001, he participated in an academic summer abroad in Prague.[2] He graduated with summa cum laude honors as a double major in economics and science, technology, and society[6] within the Public Policy Analysis program.[7] His undergraduate senior thesis in the program was titled Once Again Waiting: Implementation of the Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act.[12] While at Pomona, he volunteered helping homeless people obtain government services, organized Orientation Adventure trips, and contributed to political campaign finance research.[6][2]

After graduating in 2003,[8] he moved to Boston and enrolled in Harvard Law School. While in law school, he volunteered at Harvard’s Legal Aid Bureau, where he began to work with immigrants and low-income rental tenants who had been victims of domestic violence.[2] In October of his first year, he spoke at a teach-in about the implications of the Solomon Amendment[13] and advocated for Harvard to change its policies around military recruitment in accordance with its anti-discrimination policies.[11] He obtained a juris doctor in 2006.[8]

Law career[edit]

Muller remained at Harvard as a fellow and research assistant in the law school's Immigration and Refugee Clinical Program,[14] working under Deborah Anker.[15][2] He contributed to a chapter in law book authored by Anker.[16] When the director went on sabbatical, he stepped in to manage the program.[17] In his role at Harvard, he earned near-perfect marks. Muller was known as an incredibly caring and intelligent student, professor, and legal advocate, but was also described as being "unusually devoted" to his clients.[2]

In 2009, Muller relocated to Silicon Valley. He passed the bar exam and worked at a law firm, but did not register with the California bar.[2]

In 2011, Muller started volunteering with a legal non-profit. He then registered with the state bar and begun practicing law at at the San Francisco office of Reeves and Associates.[2][7] He quit within six months after working excessive overtime and getting caught sleeping at the office.[2]

In 2012, Muller found work at Kerosky, Purves and Bogue,[7] another immigration law firm.[2] He was fired the same year for undisclosed reasons.[10]

Also in 2012, he founded a non-profit called Immigrant Ability which provided pro bono services for immigrants with mental illness.[2]

Successful Change.org immigration petition[edit]

In June 2012, Muller took on a pro bono client named Blanca Medina,[2] a mother with post-traumatic stress disorder who fled El Salvador to escape sexual abuse. Medina was imminently scheduled to be deported after missing an immigration hearing in 2006.[18][19] Immigration agents referred to Medina as a fugitive,[18] and she was arrested by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Fugitive Operation team in 2011[19] and held as a flight risk in West County Detention Facility in Richmond, California.[20]

Muller filed paperwork to reopen her asylum case, citing the multiple rapes she faced in her home country, including one by an influential gang member during her border crossing,[21] and mental health reasons for missing court.[19] It was denied by immigration courts because the request was not timely. Muller started a Change.org petition stating that,[2] "Under ICE rules, it is free to ignore even conclusive proof that a person would suffer slow death by torture if deported."[19] The petition was widely covered by media and the case became a cause célèbre.[18] After earning nearly 118,000 signatures, Muller delivered the petition to the ICE San Fransisco field office; the case was successfully reopened for hearing and Medina's deportation proceedings were halted.[22][19][23] The popularity of the case drew attention to the use of online petitions and the influence of public opinion in immigration cases.[24] Muller argued that even missing an immigration hearing for "no good reason" should not result in deportation when there is a risk of persecution or torture.[19]

The case earned him a nomination as one of the American Bar Association's "Techiest Lawyers" in 2012.[25][7]

Disbarment[edit]

His law license was suspended in 2013 for non-payment of dues.[2] He was disbarred in the state of California in 2015 over disciplinary action from failing to show up for court several times and failing to file green card paperwork on behalf of a paying client.[26][27] He was disbarred from federal practice in the Immigration Courts in 2017 after pleading guilty to charges of kidnapping for ransom.[28]

Publications[edit]

Gomes, Andrea; Spolin, Aaron; Muller, Matt; Shabecoff, Alexa (2007). "SERVING IMMIGRANTS AND REFUGEES: A Guide to Careers in the Law" (PDF). Harvard Law School Bernard Koteen Office of Public Interest Advising.

Linzer, Drew; Menefee-Libey, David; Muller, Matt (July 2003). "The 2002 California Twenty-Ninth Congressional District Race". PS: Political Science & Politics. 36 (3): 404–404. doi:10.1017/S1049096503002555. ISSN 1537-5935.

Muller, M; Anker, D; Rosenberg, L (2006). "Escobar v Gonzales: A Backwards Step for Child Asylum Seekers and the Rule of Law in Particular Social Group Asylum Claims" (PDF). UC Davis Journal of Juvenile Law and Policy. 10 (1): 243–250.

Anker, D. E.; Muller, M. D. (2007-10-17). "Explaining Credibility Assessment in the Asylum Procedure". International Journal of Refugee Law. 19 (3): 599–602. doi:10.1093/ijrl/eem051. ISSN 0953-8186.

Mental health decline and crimes[edit]

During his time at Harvard, Muller was diagnosed with major depression with signs of mania after contemplating suicide.[2] After his symptoms continued to worsen, he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2008.[9] He developed paranoid delusions that the government had wiretapped his phone and hacked his computer due to suspected ties of some of his immigration clients to terrorists.[2]

In September 2009, Muller trespassed after dark to visit the Stanford Dish, and upon returning to his vehicle in College Terrace, Palo Alto, California, he was stopped by police and fabricated a story that he was a visiting professor at Stanford University and seeing a friend. A few weeks later, he became a person of interest in a number of nearby incidents, including an attempted sexual assault for which he was later exonerated by DNA profiling.[2] He was later suspected of being involved in other incidents.[29] Mountain View, California police concluded it was likely the same perpetrator of the College Terrace crime. Muller denied involvement in all of the incidents in a later legal filing.[2]

In October 2009, Muller was questioned at work about the College Terrace incident, which instigated new paranoia that the Palo Alto Police Department was conspiring with the Chinese government and had wire-tapped his law office and his vehicle.[2] That November, Muller traded vehicles with his mother and fled to Hurricane, Utah near Zion National Park to avoid the "psychological warfare" he believed was being waged against him by the Chinese government. His camp was set up with motion detectors and trip wires. After only two days, he begun to fear his environment and returned home to stay with his mother and later, his father.[2]

In 2011, Muller resumed psychiatry care, but after he was caught on security sleeping at his law office, his delusions resumed. He copied thousands of company files to find evidence of his bosses tracking him. The law firm sued him initially believing he was stealing the data for use to start his own practice, but dropped it. His mother rented him an apartment in Sacramento, from which he was later evicted.[2]

In 2014, he moved to Mare Island with a girlfriend and got a job at an after-school academic program. They broke up and the woman expressed concern about Muller taking long walks around the peninsula dressed entirely in black.[2]

Batman delusion[edit]

While living on Mare Island, Muller developed a delusion that a secret cabal of the world's wealthiest people were a "scienced-up version of demons" responsible for all of the evil in the world.[2] Muller suspected one of his neighbors, a physical therapist named Aaron Quinn, and his ex-girlfriend and co-worker at Kaiser Hospital in Vallejo, California,[26] Andrea Roberts, were a part of the cabal. He stole an out-of-town neighbor's white Ford Mustang, which he said drove recklessly and maybe, "saved a neighborhood kid or dog."[2]

Muller was suspected of being the "Mare Island creeper," a Peeping Tom seen with a ladder scaling homes and crouching in yards. A student said she had seen the same man walking a husky puppy and a golden retriever, a pair of dogs belonging to Muller's neighbor which he occasionally dog-sat. In a manifesto sent to Henry Lee at the San Francisco Chronicle, Muller said that he had scared the neighborhood Peeping Tom off a roof and anonymously reported it to the police.[2]

In early 2015, he moved into his mother and step-father's cabin in South Lake Tahoe, California. He became increasingly reclusive, rarely sleeping and obsessively watched the Batman film series. By spring, Muller began to believe his parents were spying on him. He entered a severe psychotic episode and created a nocturnal vigilante identity to fight evil. He wore a wetsuit and created tools resembling weapons from items like flashlights, laser pointers, dog collars, swim goggles, spray paint, and various toy guns, such as a Nerf Super Soaker. Muller created a Robin Hood plot to kidnap "evil wealthy people" for ransom to give to the poor, which he believed in his psychosis to be "morally justified."[2]

'Gone Girl' kidnapping[edit]

On March 23, 2015,[30][8] around 3:00am,[8] Muller broke into Quinn's house with a water pistol with a flashlight and a laser taped to it.[31][32][2] He drugged Quinn and his girlfriend and co-worker, Denise Huskins, and demanded Huskins bind Quinn with zip ties. During the encounter, Muller whispered and appeared to be speaking aloud to one or more accomplices, and used voicemail recordings to demand two ransom payments of $8,500[a] each that was never paid.[9] Muller developed a delusion that he was part of an elite three-person gang that began as an auto-theft ring likened to an "Ocean's Eleven gentleman criminals who only took stuff that was insured from people who could afford it."[33][9][2][8] Muller said he acted alone, referring to the professional gang as part of his psychosis. Authorities also determined that Muller acted alone.[2][33] Huskins wrote in her memoir, Victim F,[b] that she and Quinn still believed he had accomplices and were being gaslit by the authorities into a false narrative.[2]

Muller informed the couple over the course of the event that Quinn's ex-girlfriend, Roberts, not Huskins, had been his intended kidnapping target.[34][2] Muller played a recording that indicated the break-in was being completed by professionals to collect debts. The message threatened the victims with electric shock and demanded Quinn's financial information and passwords. Muller stole Quinn's car, his laptop, and led him to believe that he was being monitored by video camera, which delayed him from calling the authorities.[34][9][2][8] Muller put Huskins in the trunk of Quinn's car, moved her to the stolen Mustang, and held her captive at the cabin in South Lake Tahoe. He sexually assaulted Huskins twice.[33][8][35]

Quinn called his brother, who is an FBI agent, who told Quinn to call 911.[36] He reported the kidnapping at around 2:00pm on March 25, 2015.[37] The Vallejo police did not believe that invasion happened, or that Huskins had been abducted, instead interrogating Quinn as a murder suspect.[36]

While holding Huskins hostage, Muller sent several anonymous emails the San Francisco Chronicle demanding the ransom and claiming it was a training mission for higher net worth targets.[9] He recorded a "proof of life" of Huskins and said she would be returned "in good health."[37] The Vallejo police refused to confirm that the voice was Huskins.[38]

On March 25, 2015,[8] he drove Huskins to Huntington Beach, California, 400 miles away.[33] She was dropped off around 10:00am near her family's home.[37][8] Her and her father went to the Huntington Beach police.[39] At 9:30pm that same day,[2][37][38] the Vallejo police told the public that the incident had been hoax perpetrated by Huskins, which authorities and the media called a "real life 'Gone Girl'," referring to the film Gone Girl, an adaptation of the novel by the same name.[40][37][36][41] In 2018, it was reported that the Vallejo police was in possession of evidence that would have led them to Muller. He was caught on security purchasing a TracFone at Target in Pleasant Hill, California that was used to call Quinn while Huskins was being held.[42] Their experience was detailed in the Netflix docuseries American Nightmare.[43] They filed a lawsuit against the police department and were awarded $2.5 million.[42]

On March 26, 2015, Muller sent a 9,000-word email to the San Francisco Chronicle[44] that the intended target was not Huskins, but Roberts, and demanded the record be set straight maintaining he had kidnapped Huskins and that the couple was telling the truth. He also wrote that the operation went "terribly wrong," that he felt deep remorse and regret, and "in particular," that he was mortified of the impact he had on Huskins.[45][2][38] The Vallejo police refused to corroborate the existence of any of the property crimes he admitted to in the missive.[38] In further emails, Muller wrote that he was outraged at the police and demanded an apology on behalf of his victims.[39][44] He also contacted Kenny Park of the Vallejo police to prove the victims' innocence.[2] Muller also threatened that if the department and Park did not apologize "by noon Tuesday" (March 30, 2015) that Muller may harm again.[44]

After Nancy Grace declared on her show, "Everything about this 'kidnap' screams out hoax," Muller planned another kidnapping and intending to send photographs to Grace, with a note that it was Grace's fault and a threat to "do it again" until claims about Huskins "being the Gone Girl" were retracted.[2]

Dublin home invasion[edit]

Muller targeted a street in Dublin, California for its "easy escape" and targeted a family he said he believed in his delusion to be a part of the same "one percent" cabal to justify the crime. He said his motive was to vindicate Huskins.[2]

On June 5, 2015, at 3:30am, Muller entered the targeted home and demanded the couple lay face down on the bed. He informed them he had their daughter, and that she was safe, and informed them he would tie their hands behind their backs. The male victim fought back and tackled Muller to the ground and called for his wife to retrieve their gun. Muller hit him in the head and fled. The victim had to have the resulting wound on his head stapled shut.[46][47] The female victim grabbed her cell phone and locked herself in the bathroom to call for help. The couple's 22-year-old daughter was not taken. Muller left his cell phone behind, which was traced to the South Lake Tahoe cabin.[2]

Arrest, trial, and incarceration[edit]

On June 8, 2015, Muller demanded his mother pick him up from a Starbucks and took his brother's car without explanation. He was arrested without resisting at the cabin on June 9, 2015[2][39] by the Alameda County Sheriff's Office in connection with the Dublin case.[2][48] Misty Carausu, who was in the process of becoming a detective,[48] processed the cabin and a stolen white Ford Mustang nearby and found Muller's property, evidence matching the Dublin and Vallejo crimes, a hair from Huskins attached to a pair of swim goggles, and Quinn's laptop. The GPS on the Mustang still had the address Muller drove Huskins to in Huntington Beach in its recent destinations. Carausu connected Muller to the Vallejo case and forwarded the information she had to the FBI.[2] He was held in Santa Rita Jail after being charged with battery, robbery, and assault.[33][49]

On June 29, 2015, the FBI obtained a search warrant for Muller's arrest for the Vallejo kidnapping. On July 1, 2015, they seized drones, a wireless camera system, sheets, and a stained mattress pad from a storage unit in Muller's name.[50] The FBI announced charges of kidnapping on July 13, 2015.[51]

On September 16, 2015, Muller's attorney withdrew a motion to suppress the cell phone as evidence. The motion alleged that authorities violated Muller's constitutional rights by carrying out an illegal search when they bypassed the lock screen by dialing 911 to retrieve the phone number from emergency dispatchers. Chris Shepard, the sergeant in the case, testified the situation did not require a search warrant.[49][52] On September 18, 2015,[51] Muller pled no-contest to all charges in the Dublin case. He fainted in the court room.[49] He had confessed to some of the crimes while speaking "off the record" to a reporter while in jail.[33][52][2]

Muller was arraigned on September 21, 2015 and indicted for kidnapping by a federal grand jury on October 1, 2015 for the Vallejo case. On September 29, 2016, Muller plead guilty to kidnapping.[53] He was sentenced to 40 years on March 16, 2017.[51] He was remanded to a high-security federal prison in Tucson, Arizona.[2][30]

In January 2018, the state filed charges against Muller in Solano County, California for two counts of rape, false imprisonment, kidnapping, burglary, and robbery of a residential dwelling.[30] He was transferred to a Solano County jail.[2] Muller represented himself pro se and proclaimed he was "not guilty" and said he was "not mentally sound" when he plead guilty to the federal charges. He told reporters he would plead guilty if Huskins and Quinn donated half of their settlement to charity.[41] He filed motion to have his conviction vacated due to failings by his attorney, prosecutorial misconduct, and constitutional violations. The motion was denied.[54][35] Muller said that he was physically and sexually abused in prison. He said he experienced symptoms of PTSD from being beaten and raped while in prison.[2][41][55] He requested counsel and was appointed a public defender on September 24, 2018.[56]

In October 2018, Muller described a delusion in which he became convinced the prison officials were experimenting with his medication. He said he planned a temporary insanity defense, though experts said he had low odds of winning, based on the fact that insanity pleas require mental illness so severe the defendant becomes unable to distinguish right from wrong.[57]

In 2019, Muller fired his public defender.[58] He was found competent to represent himself by a Solano County judge. Acting as his own attorney gave him the opportunity to cross-examine his victims, which their attorney protested, citing Proposition 115.[54] Muller declined to do so, because he did not want to re-victimize them.[59][2] He filed 35-page speedy trial request citing his mental condition and assaults while in custody[60] and discovery was scheduled for late April.[61] After receiving discovery, Muller fell into a new delusion that the Dublin police had conspired to frame him.[2]

Muller alleged that four days before his arrest, Dublin police broke into his cabin to plant evidence, planted additional evidence during his arrest, altered police reports, "Hollywood-grade edits" to evidence photos, and forged forensic records and judicial records. Due to details he could not remember Muller wrote, "The government’s case included evidence and allegations the Movant did not understand and could not remember. The Movant had believed this was a matter of mental illness…. However, it was federal authorities and not the Movant’s mind that had altered reality."[2]

In November 2020, Muller was diagnosed with schizophrenia after he pronounced his belief that his family had been replaced with imposters, that he was surrounded by "a bunch of actors... agents... even sort of demon-possessed people," and had a device implanted in his body against his will. The judge, whom Muller referred to as Lucifer, ruled that he was incompetent to stand trial.[2] He was moved to Napa State Hospital in 2021.[27][60] In September, a judge ordered him to be medicated against his will.[2]

In March 2022, after Muller was deemed competent, his attorney confirmed he was pleading no-contest to all state charges. He was sentenced to 31 years on state charges to be served concurrently.[30]

He is being held in Federal Correctional Institution, Tucson with a release date of July 8, 2049.[62]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Reports varied between the ransom amount being $8,500, $15,000, and $17,000. Muller said he chose $8,500 to avoid banks flagging the transaction. Court documents stated the demand was for two separate payments.
  2. ^ Huskins is referred to as "Victim F" in court documents.

References[edit]

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