Chicago Sun-Times

KIDNAPPED, THEN SCORNED

In impactful Netflix doc, duo tells a compelling story of police blaming the victims

- RICHARD ROEPER rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

It’s easy to understand how investigat­ors and the media in 2015 were so quick to draw parallels between the story of Denise Huskins and the framework of David Fincher’s 2014 thriller “Gone Girl,” which was based on the 2012 Gillian Flynn novel of the same name.

In “Gone Girl,” Rosamund Pike’s Amy is married to Ben Affleck’s Nick, who is having an affair with a student. When there’s a break-in at their home and Amy disappears, Nick immediatel­y becomes the prime suspect, as the media swarm to cover the case. Spoiler alert: Amy resurfaces at their home, telling a horrific tale about being kidnapped and raped, and the police are suspicious of her tale to say the least.

In March of 2015 — just six months after the release of “Gone Girl” — 30-year-old Aaron Quinn called Vallejo, California, police to report that his 29-year-old girlfriend, Denise Huskins, had been kidnapped. Aaron immediatel­y becomes the prime suspect, as the media swarm to cover the case. After Denise suddenly resurfaces, telling a horrific tale about being kidnapped and raped, the police immediatel­y pivot and focus their suspicions on Denise.

You might remember something about the so-called “Real Life Gone Girl” case, but the threepart Netflix series “American Nightmare” from filmmakers Felicity Morris and Bernadette Higgins (“The Tinder Swindler”) still packs a sharp punch and feels like a fresh and comprehens­ive retelling of the story. The success of the docuseries comes in great part because Huskins and Quinn sat down for extensive interviews and are admirably forthcomin­g in their recollecti­ons of the ordeal they endured — first at the hands of Denise’s captor, and then when they were vilified by investigat­ors, judged by the media and subjected to online abuse.

In “Part One, The Boyfriend,” we hear Aaron’s 911 call, with the dispatcher almost immediatel­y expressing skepticism:

“My girlfriend got kidnapped last night.”

“What do you mean she got kidnapped. … And you didn’t call last night when this occurred?”

“I was tied up.”

“What time did you get untied, sir?”

At the police department, Aaron tells investigat­ors of a person or persons breaking in wearing wetsuits, telling Aaron by name to lie face down, putting swim goggles over his head, plying him with sedatives and kidnapping Denise.

“We’re looking at suspicion falling on the boyfriend,” says crime reporter Henry Lee of the San Francisco Chronicle. In the interrogat­ion room, Detective Mat Mustard tells Aaron: “Your story’s very … far-fetched. … I’m going to presume that she wasn’t alive and kicking when she left the house. … And you carted her ass out of there, and you dripped her blood going down the stairs.”

You want to scream at Aaron: “Lawyer up!” but he meekly says, “I did not do that,” to which Mustard retorts, “Yeah, you did.”

FBI Special Agent Peter French administer­s a polygraph, tells Aaron he failed and says, “She’s gone … and you know she’s gone.”

But after the kidnapper sends an audio message to the Chronicle’s Lee on which Denise says she’s been kidnapped and she’s fine, and after Denise shows up in her hometown of Huntington, California, some 400 miles south of Vallejo, authoritie­s almost immediatel­y leap to the conclusion the whole thing was a hoax. At a press conference, Vallejo Police Dept. Lt. Kenny Park says, “Mr. Quinn and Ms. Huskins have plundered valuable resources away from our community … while instilling fear among our community members.”

In Part Two, titled “Gone Girl,” we see Denise giving her statements to police and giving interviews in present day in which she bravely recounts being bound and raped twice by her captor. Still, investigat­ors eschewed any valid effort to locate the kidnapper in favor of telling Denise it was a federal crime to lie to federal agents.

In Part Three, “The Others,” we meet Misty Carausu, a former detective with the Dublin, California, police department, who was in on the arrest of one Matthew Muller for a similar home invasion. Carausu recognized similariti­es to the kidnapping of Denise, and tells us, “They’re calling this woman a liar on national news, but I just wanted to reach through the computer screen, give her a hug and say, ‘I got you.’ ”

We’re told the city of Vallejo reached a $2.5 million settlement in the lawsuit filed by Denise and Aaron. Having witnessed what they went through, that amount seems low.

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Aaron Quinn immediatel­y became the prime suspect after reporting the kidnapping of his girlfriend, Denise Huskins.
NETFLIX Aaron Quinn immediatel­y became the prime suspect after reporting the kidnapping of his girlfriend, Denise Huskins.
 ?? NETFLIX ?? Former detective Misty Carausu tells the “American Nightmare” filmmakers about noticing familiar elements of Denise Huskins’ kidnapping.
NETFLIX Former detective Misty Carausu tells the “American Nightmare” filmmakers about noticing familiar elements of Denise Huskins’ kidnapping.
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