‘American Nightmare’ kidnapper Matthew Muller gets life sentences for South Bay home invasions

SAN JOSE — Matthew Muller was sentenced to two lifetime prison terms Friday for holding women captive during two Santa Clara County home invasions in 2009, six years before he gained worldwide infamy for a 2015 Vallejo kidnapping that inspired a fervent true-crime media following and would turn out to be just a slice of his professed serial criminality.

Matthew Daniel Muller is shown in a 2015 booking photo. (Dublin Police Dept.)
Matthew Daniel Muller is shown in a 2015 booking photo. (Dublin Police Dept.) 

Muller, who turned 48 on Thursday, pleaded guilty Jan. 17 in a San Jose courtroom to two felony charges of assault with intent to commit rape during a first-degree burglary, related to previously unsolved nighttime attacks on sleeping women in Mountain View and Palo Alto reported 16 years ago.

On Friday, the two victims, identified in court as Jane Doe 1 and Jane Doe 2, gave statements to the court — one of them speaking in person and the other through a statement read by Deputy District Attorney Brian King — describing the continual, lasting traumatic effects of Muller’s assaults.

Muller did not give a statement prior to his sentencing by Superior Court Judge Cynthia Sevely, who remanded him back to federal prison.

He has been held in the Santa Clara County Main Jail in San Jose since Dec. 27, after he was transferred from a federal prison in Tucson, Arizona, where he was incarcerated and serving a 40-year sentence following his conviction for the Vallejo kidnapping. He is also serving a concurrent 31-year prison sentence for the rape of kidnapping victim Denise Huskins Quinn, after the sexual assault was prosecuted separately in state court.

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His overall prison time, which had been previously limited to the 40 years of the federal term, will now increase because the new sentences are required to be served on top of his existing state sentence.

Shortly after he was charged with the South Bay crimes, Contra Costa County authorities announced that they were charging him with a 2015 kidnapping in San Ramon that reportedly took place two weeks after the Vallejo case. The San Ramon case only surfaced in recent months after Muller implicated himself last year in a pattern of crimes that could involve as many as a half-dozen total kidnappings dating back as far as 1993, when he was 16 years old.

The Santa Clara County cases were definitively linked to Muller after a renewed investigation that was spurred by a chance letter-writing exchange initiated by Nick Borges, police chief in the Monterey County city of Seaside.

Borges told reporters at a Jan. 7 news conference that after watching “American Nightmare” — a popular 2024 Netflix documentary on the Vallejo case — he messaged Huskins Quinn and her husband Aaron Quinn on Instagram. That contact led to their participation in a police seminar training hundreds of officers to conduct effective victim interrogations and avoid the embarrassing mistakes by police in Vallejo, where the city ultimately paid a $2.5 million settlement to the couple.

In March 2015, Muller surveilled then broke into the Vallejo home Huskins Quinn shared with her now-husband, held them captive and subjected them to psychological probing before fleeing with Huskins Quinn. He took her to a home in the Lake Tahoe area, where he held her captive again before releasing her in Southern California.

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He was arrested in June 2015 in connection with a home invasion in Dublin, and subsequent search warrants recovered evidence from the Vallejo kidnapping, including a video of him assaulting Huskins. The case attracted international attention because Vallejo police wrongly called the kidnapping a hoax, prompting Muller to contact a news reporter to confirm the crime occurred.

Borges, with the support of Huskins Quinn and Quinn, wrote to Muller in prison; in the ensuing correspondence Muller reportedly confessed to the South Bay cases and other crimes with the apparent intent of helping police improve their practices. That included a reference to a San Ramon kidnapping that had never been reported. That led to multiple police and prosecutor visits to Muller in prison, including from authorities in Santa Clara and El Dorado counties.

The first South Bay attack Muller admitted to was reported Sept. 29, 2009, after he broke into a woman’s Mountain View home, with the victim telling police that she woke up to a man in a ski mask pushing her face down in her bed and telling her he was committing an identity theft robbery. The intruder handcuffed her and bound her ankles with “some sort of Velcro restraint,” made her drink Nyquil and used her phone to make several calls. The woman said the man said he was going to rape her but that she persuaded him to change his mind and flee.

On Oct. 18, 2009, Muller broke into a Palo Alto home and ambushed a sleeping woman while also wearing a mask. A police report states that she described a man speaking in a “low growl” while restraining her with fabric fasteners on her ankles and arms, putting plugs in her ears and covering her eyes with surgical tape. The woman was also made to drink Nyquil. He also stated his intention to rape her before she told him about a past sexual assault, which apparently caused him to relent and leave.

Muller was considered a suspect early on, but DNA analysis was inconclusive. About a year ago, after being contacted by Borges, Palo Alto police and the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office renewed the investigation, which reexamined DNA traces from the fabric fasteners used in the 2009 home invasions and found a match with Muller.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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