The Reporter (Vacaville)

Kidnapper of Vallejo couple admitted to jail-based competency treatment

Matthew D. Muller, who kidnapped Denise Huskins and Aaron Quinn, also ordered to return to Department 2 on April 22 for further proceeding­s

- By Richard Bammer rbammer@thereporte­r.com Contact reporter Richard Bammer at (707) 4538164.

The 44-year-old suspect in a bizarre 2015 Vallejo kidnapping case that made national headlines has been admitted to a jail-based competency treatment program and, for the time being, apparently will not face a jury trial.

Matthew Daniel Muller — who was sentenced in 2017 in a Sacramento federal courtroom to 40 years in prison for kidnapping a couple and raping the female victim before releasing her near her family’s Southern California home — was scheduled to appear March 24 for a mental health placement review in Department 2 in the Justice Building in Vallejo.

But according to court records, Superior Court Judge Daniel Healy received a notice that Muller had been admitted to the program. (Jail-based competency treatment is a specialize­d program for defendants who have been deemed incompeten­t to stand trial by the courts.)

On Nov. 2, Healy received a doctor’s report and later ordered Muller placed in the care of MHM Services, a nationwide firm which contracts with government­al agencies for inmate care and has offices in Vallejo, a secured facility.

Court records did not indicate the doctor’s determinat­ion but, typically, if a defendant is sent from Solano County Jail to a mental health services agency, they are likely deemed incompeten­t.

Under state law, a defendant who is considered unable to help in his or her defense or understand court proceeding­s cannot be tried. However, once they are deemed competent, criminal charges can be reinstated and the defendant can be scheduled to face more court proceeding­s, including a jury trial.

On Dec. 4 last year, Healy ordered Muller committed to one of five California state hospitals for a maximum term of two years. On Dec. 21, the judge received an update regarding placement alternativ­es and care from MHM Services and earlier this month learned the defendant had been placed in the treatment program.

Muller’s latest court appearance­s come after a lengthy series of defendant motions, going back to October 2018, and a jury trial date that had long been set for fall 2020.

But Healy has scheduled Muller to return at 1:30 p.m. April 22 for further proceeding­s and an order to show cause, a judge’s demand for either the prosecutor or defense attorney to justify, explain or prove why the court should or should not grant a motion. Although he once served as his own lawyer, Muller is now represente­d by the Solano Defender. County Alternate Public

hearing A state for preliminar­y Muller, formerly was held of more Orangevale, than two with years what ago. can He only is charged be described as a crime so incredible that Vallejo police at first considered it an elaborate hoax.

During the preliminar­y hearing, Muller — a former Marine, Gulf War veteran and Harvard-trained lawyer — listened to the female victim in the case, Denise Huskins. She recounted some of the horrific events that began on March 23, 2015, when the defendant entered the Mare Island home belonging to Huskins and Aaron Quinn, who are in their 30s.

Federal court records indicate that Muller restrained them with zip ties, blindfolds and headphones, then drugged them both. Muller left

Quinn behind in the home with a warning that he was being watched on camera and told him not to call the police. Muller placed Huskins into the trunk of Quinn’s car then drove off and switched vehicles, with Huskins still blindfolde­d, driving her to a South Lake Tahoe family home, where he raped her twice. Muller held her for two days before driving her to Southern California, then released her near her family’s Huntington Beach home. Vallejo police called the reported abduction a complete fabricatio­n for which the couple should apologize. Huskins and Quinn subsequent­ly filed a defamation of character lawsuit against the police department. Police later apologized to the couple who, in 2018, reached a $2.5 million settlement with the City of Vallejo and its police department. Muller was arrested in South Lake Tahoe on June 8, 2015, after evidence, including a video of Muller and Huskins, was found at his mother’s home. In the state case, filed by the Solano County District Attorney’s Office on Jan. 26, 2018, Muller faces six felony charges. They include kidnapping, two counts of forcible rape by force, robbery, burglary and false imprisonme­nt. Muller has pleaded not guilty to the charges and was confined for months in Solano County Jail in Fairfield, with bail set at $2.25 million. He filed a 35-page speedy trial request on Feb. 13, 2019, citing, among other things, his health condition and saying he suffered assault while in custody. Quinn and Huskins decided to pursue the state case so he could be held accountabl­e for his crimes in addition to the federal conviction, Solano County District Attorney Krishna Abrams told The Reporter in 2019.

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