California attack survivors, who were not believed by police, get the last word against kidnapper.
In the quiet, pre-dawn hours of March 23, 2015, the lives of Aaron Quinn and his girlfriend, Denise Huskins, were irrevocably shattered. As they lay asleep in their Vallejo, California, home, a sinister presence watched them, unseen. Around 3 a.m., their peaceful slumber was violently interrupted by a strange man, his voice chillingly calm as he declared, "This is a robbery. We are not here to hurt you, stay calm." The couple never saw his face, but a bizarre detail stood out: he was wearing a wetsuit. He claimed to be part of a larger group intent on robbery, yet he was the sole speaker, a disembodied presence they would forever refer to as "The Voice."
Denise Huskins Quinn vividly recalled the terror of her eyes snapping open to flashing white lights dancing across the walls, accompanied by red laser dots scanning their bedroom. "The Voice" then issued a chilling command: Denise was to tie Aaron up with zip ties, which had been left conveniently on the edge of the bed. Aaron, bound and disoriented, recounted being forced to hop to his closet. From there, he could hear what sounded like others ransacking the kitchen downstairs, the distinct whir of a drill adding to the surreal horror. Denise was then ordered into the same closet, where "The Voice" bound her as well. To further incapacitate them, they were both made to drink a sedative, plunging them into a terrifying haze. Blacked-out swim goggles were placed over their eyes, severing their connection to the visual world. Eventually, Denise was told she would be taken for 48 hours, held captive until Aaron could complete a series of "tasks" for her release, tasks that primarily involved retrieving ransom money from a bank.
Aaron was then led downstairs to the living room, where "The Voice" had already mounted a security camera to monitor his every move. The kidnapper delivered a stark warning: if Aaron dared to contact the police, Denise would be killed. The chilling sounds of Denise being placed in the trunk of Aaron’s car echoed through the house, her simple "OK" a desperate whisper that Aaron feared would be the last words he ever heard from her. Overwhelmed by the sedative and the traumatic events, Aaron soon passed out. He awoke in a stupor later that morning. "The Voice" had taken Aaron’s laptop, but deliberately left his cell phone, promising future contact. Aaron, managing to wiggle his hands free from the zip ties, faced an agonizing dilemma: call for help and risk Denise’s life, or obey the kidnapper and potentially save her. The weight of that decision was immense. He knew calling the police would ensure his immediate safety, but the terrifying possibility that it would lead to Denise’s death paralyzed him with fear.
Despite the grave threat, Aaron took the desperate chance and called 911. The Vallejo Police Department swiftly responded, but as Aaron recounted the surreal details of the home invasion and kidnapping, he immediately sensed skepticism from the investigators. He acknowledged their initial doubt, stating, "I don’t blame them for being a little skeptical." However, he fully cooperated, granting permission to search his home and agreeing to provide a statement at the station, his sole focus being to help them find Denise. He surrendered his cell phone and clothes for evidence, and was given prison attire to change into. It was then that lead detective Mathew Mustard began his interrogation, a session that quickly turned accusatory. Just 40 minutes into their interview, Mustard leaned back, openly declaring Aaron’s story "far-fetched" and unbelievable. The detective’s words were a punch to Aaron’s gut: "I don’t think she was kidnapped from your home… I think something bad happened in your house." It became horrifyingly clear that Mustard was not only disbelieving him but accusing him of Denise’s murder. "Denise is going to be found… And when I say she’s found, she’s dead. They did not come into your house and kidnap her and take her for ransom. That did not happen! It didn’t! No it did not!" Aaron, bewildered and terrified, could only stammer, "I have nothing to admit to… I didn’t do anything… What the f— is going on?"
Meanwhile, news of Denise’s disappearance spread rapidly, captivating the media and the public. Julie Watts, an investigative correspondent for CBS News California, observed the immediate public fascination. The prevailing assumption, Watts noted, was that Denise was dead, and her boyfriend, Aaron Quinn, instantly became the primary suspect in the court of public opinion. Aaron grew increasingly concerned that investigators were so fixated on him that they weren’t actively searching for the real kidnappers. After being transferred from Aaron’s car trunk to another vehicle, Denise endured hours of being driven to an unknown location, her mind racing with terrifying possibilities. "You think of all the possible things that are gonna happen. Where am I gonna be taken? Am I gonna be tortured? Am I gonna have to withstand God knows what?" she recalled. "The Voice" eventually took Denise to a secluded home, where she was kept blindfolded and sedated. He reiterated that she would remain there until his group received the ransom. Drifting in and out of consciousness, she remembered him chillingly stating they had done this before, before he then raped her. The following morning, Denise heard a car drive off, and shortly after, she was released, disoriented but free. She found herself walking down an alley, turning a corner, and recognizing the street she had grown up on.
A neighbor called the Huntington Beach Police, and the news of Denise’s reappearance spread like wildfire across the airwaves. Despite having no communication since the attack, Denise recounted the exact same harrowing story to the Huntington Beach officers that Aaron had told the Vallejo Police. Yet, she too quickly sensed disbelief. Officers questioned her account, focusing instead on "what’s going on with Vallejo," leaving Denise with a chilling feeling that "something wasn’t right." Worried, Denise promptly hired an attorney. That very night, as she made her way back to Vallejo, the Vallejo Police Department held a press conference, publicly discrediting Aaron’s story and criticizing Denise for refusing to speak with them. Lt. Kenny Park of the Vallejo P.D. infamously declared to reporters that "Mr. Quinn and Ms. Huskins has plundered valuable resources away from our community," effectively dismissing the entire case as a hoax. The media, seizing on the sensational narrative, quickly coined a new label: "Gone Girl," referencing the popular movie about a woman who fakes her own kidnapping. The label stuck, cementing public perception against the victims.
That same night, Denise’s attorney informed the Vallejo Police that Denise had been raped and requested a sexual assault exam, hoping DNA evidence could identify her attacker. Shockingly, Denise says the Vallejo Police refused to order the exam until she agreed to speak with them directly. She overheard an officer on the phone demand, "How do we know she was raped? She won’t even talk to us." The officer then callously instructed her, "Just tell her not to shower, keep her clothes on, don’t wash her hands, brush her teeth." Denise was forced to wait until the following morning to go to the station. Detective Mathew Mustard, the same detective who had accused Aaron, assured Denise, "We’re not here to judge… and we are just looking to figure out the truth." She endured a grueling six-hour interview before finally being allowed to go to a hospital for the long-delayed exam. Denise reflected on the ordeal, nodding affirmatively when asked if she had to prove herself worthy enough to have the exam scheduled. The initial testing, however, yielded no immediate leads. Having cooperated fully, both Denise and Aaron feared they would be charged with lying to the police. All the while, the terrifying reality remained that their attacker was still at large. Denise expressed her profound fear: "That was I think the most terrifying thing, knowing… They will do this again. We know that the only way that we’ll be vindicated and the truth will come out is if they attack another family."
Their grim prediction came true. In June 2015, nearly three months after Denise Huskins and Aaron Quinn’s ordeal, a home invasion was reported in Dublin, California, just an hour south of Vallejo. Investigative correspondent Julie Watts described the incident: "An intruder came in. The wife called 911 while the husband fought back." The intruder managed to escape but left behind a crucial piece of evidence – his cell phone. Detectives traced the phone to a house in South Lake Tahoe. "So they get their investigators together and they show up at the Tahoe cabin," Watts explained. Inside, they found 38-year-old Matthew Muller, a Harvard-educated lawyer and former Marine. He was immediately arrested for the Dublin attack. Watts noted, "He is not the type of person that you would expect." A subsequent search of the cabin yielded astonishing evidence: Aaron’s laptop. Authorities then searched a stolen car parked nearby. Its GPS history revealed the exact location where Denise Huskins had been dropped off. In the back of the car, investigators found blacked-out swim goggles with a single strand of blonde hair attached. The hair was later confirmed to be Denise’s. The goggles, the GPS data, and Aaron’s laptop – all irrefutable evidence that corroborated every detail of Denise and Aaron’s "far-fetched" story. "The only way they were vindicated was not by police work, it was by other people being harmed," Julie Watts lamented. "The Voice" finally had a name. Matthew Muller would be charged with Denise Huskins’ kidnapping and rape.
Despite Muller’s arrest, the Quinns’ sense of safety was only partially restored. "A little safer," Denise admitted, while Aaron added, "The arrest made us feel a little safer, but we still believe there’s other people out there." No one else, however, was ever charged. Denise and Aaron steeled themselves to face Muller in court, preparing for a long and emotionally draining trial. However, as Aaron explained, "Well, he ended up taking a plea deal." Muller ultimately received a sentence of 40 years for the Dublin attack and their attack, a term that fell short of the life sentence Denise and Aaron had desperately hoped for. Denise expressed her deep concern: "The idea that he’ll be too old when he gets out to do something like this again, I don’t think that’s true." Around this time, Denise and Aaron filed a civil lawsuit against the City of Vallejo, alleging defamation and emotional distress. They eventually settled for $2.5 million. When asked if the Vallejo Police ever vindicated them, Denise simply replied, "No." Aaron added, "It was always… this case was too strange to believe." The Vallejo Police Department did not respond to "48 Hours’" request for comment but did issue a statement after the settlement, acknowledging, "The Huskins Quinn case was not publicly handled with the type of sensitivity a case of this nature should have been handled with." Although their immediate case seemed closed, Denise and Aaron harbored hopes that authorities would continue to investigate Muller for other potential crimes and possible accomplices. "There was still so many questions that were left unanswered," Denise said. "A big piece of that was, what else was he involved in? We just knew that our case… wasn’t the only one." But, as Denise lamented, "We knew, but did you feel like anyone was listening to you? Well, no. That’s the problem."
Denise and Aaron spent years trying to rebuild their lives and move forward. They married, started a family, and eventually decided it was time to reclaim their narrative by telling their story in their own words. "We can… take back control of… of our trauma and maybe use it for good," Denise stated. They co-authored a book and participated in the Netflix series "American Nightmare," which captivated millions of viewers in 2024. Among those viewers was Chief Nick Borges, the police chief in Seaside, California. "I was hooked as soon as it started," Borges confessed. Deeply moved by their story, Chief Borges felt compelled to reach out to Denise on Instagram, offering an apology on behalf of all law enforcement. "I want to reach out to these people. I want to hug her. I want to hug him and just like, oh my God, I’m so sorry." Denise was profoundly touched by his message. "I think I got really emotional," she said. "We’re not asking for a whole lot, you know, like just to be respected and listened to, and treated like we have value. It meant the world to… feel like we had an ally." Borges then invited Denise and Aaron to Seaside to speak about their harrowing experiences with law enforcement. At the event, Aaron passionately articulated their frustration: "I gave them access to everything, and it wasn’t enough because they had already decided I killed her." Chief Borges, determined to help them find more answers, decided to take an unconventional step. "I don’t have a problem shaking the tree a little bit and flipping rocks," he declared. He wrote to Muller in prison, being "very honest with him… I want to know if you acted alone or not." Within weeks, Muller responded. In his first letter, he claimed he acted alone. Borges described beginning a "kind of writing relationship" with Muller, who then sent a second, much thicker letter.
In this extensive letter, Muller confessed to two crimes in Santa Clara County in 2009 – six years before the attack on Denise and Aaron. Julie Watts revealed, "One was in Palo Alto, one was in Mountain View. He broke in sort of disguised and attempted sexual assault." Palo Alto Police had previously identified Muller as a suspect due to his prowling in the area, but lacked sufficient evidence to charge him at the time. Now, he was offering full confessions. Chief Borges confirmed, "They were full-blown confessions with specific details that only the suspect would know." Muller also hinted at even more crimes, teasing details in his correspondence. Vern Pierson, the District Attorney of El Dorado County, where Denise Huskins had been held captive, also offered his assistance in 2024. Although not involved in the original investigation, Pierson wanted to speak with Muller directly. He believed the most effective way to encourage Muller to open up further was to employ a "science-based interviewing" strategy. Pierson explained that a hallmark of this technique is "speaking to somebody without revealing any judgment you might have about either what they’re saying or what you think about them as a person." Tracy Smith noted the stark contrast to the Vallejo P.D.’s approach, to which Pierson agreed, stating, "They passed judgment… and they sought to confirm, confirm, confirm. And every time he would say, no, that’s not what happened. They would cut him off, change the subject, go back to, you know, the theory that they had." Pierson was resolute in doing things differently. He brought in a highly-trained FBI interviewer specializing in this technique, a strategy that would ultimately yield significant results.
In November 2024, D.A. Vern Pierson and the FBI interviewer flew to Arizona to confront Matthew Muller at the prison where he was serving his 40-year sentence. Their goal was to uncover more confessions and understand his motivations. Pierson described Muller as "extraordinarily manipulative," believing that "if he’s telling you anything… there is a reason why he’s telling you what he’s telling you." With an audio recorder running, Muller claimed a religious transformation in prison motivated him to be upfront about his past. He recounted a history of insomnia, leading to long night walks, which evolved into voyeurism. "I started then looking in windows — where it started general curiosity, then went kind of sexual," Muller admitted. He described a long history of voyeurism, including setting up a video camera in a Harvard Law School office bathroom in the early 2000s, and later, doing the same while on vacation in Hawaii. The more freedom they gave Muller to speak, the more depravity he unveiled. After several hours, he confessed to yet another home invasion on the border of Contra Costa County, occurring just two weeks after his attack on Denise and Aaron. Muller described climbing onto a veranda with a ladder, entering a family’s home, and waking a mother, father, and their teenage son. He tied them up, claiming to be part of a "criminal organization" to whom a relative owed money. He instructed the mother to withdraw ransom money from a bank. After she returned with $30,000, Muller threatened severe harm if they ever reported it to the police. The family, terrified, never did.
"So, there was no crime that matched this reported back then, at that time?" Tracy Smith asked. "No… there was nothing," Pierson confirmed. This wasn’t the only unrecorded crime Muller confessed to. He recalled what he claimed was his very first attack, as a teenager in the suburbs of Sacramento. Muller described fixating on a young couple at a state park campsite in nearby Folsom. He returned that night with a stolen gun, ordering them out of their tent, tying them up face down, and then carrying the woman away down a bike trail. "Took the woman across to do something bad to her," he chillingly stated. He sexually assaulted her, then fled after spotting a nearby light. "I basically forgot about it pretty quickly. And I just put it out of my mind. I didn’t — it was like it didn’t happen," he claimed. Leaving that interview, Pierson’s team immediately set out to corroborate Muller’s confessions. For the unreported home invasion, the FBI interviewer had Muller describe the location and even draw a diagram. Pierson’s team cross-referenced this with Google Maps, eventually identifying a community that closely matched Muller’s drawing. Pierson wondered if the ladder Muller mentioned using might still be in the ravine behind the house nine years later. It was a long shot, but Contra Costa investigators agreed to search. A couple of hours later, Pierson received a text message: "They found the ladder." Tracy Smith remarked, "But how remarkable is that?" Pierson, with a smile, agreed, "Pretty remarkable." The family still living there confirmed every detail of Muller’s account.
Next, Pierson’s team searched for the campsite victims. They scoured Folsom and Sacramento County records until a staffer discovered a four-page State Parks report of an incident from August 7, 1993. At the time, Muller was only 16. "We look at it, and it’s very close to what he described. I mean virtually identical," Pierson confirmed, reading from the report: "Victim exited the tent with two sleeping bags and pillows and as told by subject to lay face down." This had to be it. Pierson notified the Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office, and Criminal Investigators Kevin Papineau and Michelle Hendricks took over. At the scene, Tracy Smith asked if it looked similar to the 1990s. Papineau confirmed, "Essentially up here it did." The campsites are now gone, and the original investigators have passed away, so Papineau and Hendricks began by retracing Muller’s steps. Tracy Smith envisioned the terror: "So he brings her up here. And again, she has no idea what’s going — what’s going on." Hendricks emphasized, "Right. And — and that night, this place is pitch-black." "My goodness," Smith said, "It must be terrifying. Absolutely terrifying." From the report, they knew the victim’s boyfriend had found her on a footbridge along the bike trail, untied her, and they called for help. Hendricks explained, "A park ranger showed up, a Folsom P.D. officer showed up and — and they took a statement from — them and then they left — The officers left." Papineau and Hendricks also found photos officers took that night, which showed a gun they believed Muller dropped when he fled. With no other leads to follow, they reached out to the victims.
"How old were you in 1993?" Tracy Smith asked the female victim, who wished to be identified as "Lynn" and not show her face. "I was 19," Lynn replied, recalling, "in the middle of the night — we were awakened to someone hitting the back of our tent." This was the first time Lynn was speaking publicly about her ordeal. "The only thing I can really remember is just praying, praying for this to stop, praying for him to get away, praying that he doesn’t kill me," she confessed. Lynn recounted that after she and her boyfriend called for help that night, the officers didn’t seem to take her assault seriously. "It very much felt like they maybe didn’t believe me or believe my boyfriend — just by their line of questioning," she explained. "Like — with my boyfriend, they asked him, ‘you mean you didn’t see the gun? What do you mean you didn’t see the gun?’ — instead of just listening to us and believing what we were telling them." She called the parks department for months seeking updates, but nothing ever materialized. "In fact, I even stopped telling people about it as time went on," Lynn said. She and her boyfriend eventually married, drawing strength from each other, but Lynn admitted it was difficult to ever feel truly safe. "It’s kind of hard to describe because — It’s just kind of part of who you are now," she said of the weight she carried. "For many years, I didn’t go by myself out at night — even during the daytime, I’d make sure I’d — keep an eye over my shoulder of who’s around and be aware of my surroundings at all times. I didn’t feel comfortable wearing shoes — that I felt like I couldn’t run in, so like flip-flops or sandals — just in case I need to run." But that began to change when she first spoke with Papineau and Hendricks. "I felt this sense of relief — I knew that I was being believed. I knew that something was getting done about this, finally." Lynn felt even greater relief knowing her attacker was behind bars, but she yearned for him to be held accountable for what he had done to her. "No, you didn’t get away with this. You didn’t just move on with your life and forgot it — that it happened. You don’t get to do that."
For Denise Huskins Quinn and Aaron Quinn, learning the details of Muller’s first attack at just 16 years old was both devastating and strangely validating. "To learn that he was 16 years old the first time he attacked a couple — it made a lot of sense," Denise said, "but it’s also just incredibly disturbing." Aaron added, "A lot of people have suffered from this man. Someone breaking in the middle of the night — tying you up, these — are things that are nightmares." Denise reflected on Muller’s pattern: "The voyeurism, the stalking — I think it’s a way of invading people’s lives. To terrorize." In late 2024, Matthew Muller was charged with the attempted rapes in Santa Clara County, the first attacks he confessed to in his letters. He was flown back to California to face those charges, and there, he was also charged with attacking the family in Contra Costa. While in the Santa Clara County Jail, Muller wrote yet another letter. Vern Pierson revealed, "He sent a letter to Nick Borges, essentially indicating he had additional — information that he wanted to provide to Denise and Aaron." Tracy Smith deduced, "He’s trying to — lure Denise and Aaron into coming and talking to him." Pierson unequivocally agreed: "A hundred percent. I read that letter exactly that way." District Attorney Vern Pierson suspected that meeting with Denise, in particular, may have been Muller’s ulterior motive for confessing all along. Denise acknowledged Pierson’s theory: "D.A. Pierson was like — he’s confessing to certain things for a reason. They’re all in California. I think he wants to get back to California — in hopes that he can meet with you."
Even with full awareness of Muller’s manipulative intentions, Denise and Aaron still desired to speak with him. Muller had confirmed and detailed other crimes, yet steadfastly maintained he acted alone in their attack. Denise and Aaron, however, were adamant that they heard other people during their ordeal. "I felt like maybe of all people, he would be more honest with us," Denise hoped. But having already spent many hours interviewing Muller, Pierson did not believe a direct meeting between the victims and the perpetrator was a good idea. "I didn’t think that was a good idea," he stated. They reached a compromise. On February 13, 2025, Muller and his attorney met with Pierson, the FBI interviewer, and Chief Borges at the Santa Clara County Jail. Denise and Aaron were present, observing from another room. An FBI agent informed Muller, "Denise, Aaron — are all present in building today and observing this live." Muller simply responded, "OK." Denise noted, "They let him know early on in the interview — They’re observing they’re — not coming in. I think that irritated him. The FBI interviewer had said — That conversation was very different." When pressed about his desire for the meeting, Muller claimed an obligation to provide closure for Denise and Aaron, and in a self-serving twist, added, "it’s in a way that I need closure as well."
However, when the FBI agent directly confronted Muller about Denise and Aaron’s lingering belief in accomplices, Muller initially deflected, speaking in frustrating circles. "The only other information I could provide, and it does go back a bit into the religious matter. So, you know, if you are having events that seem to be described by the Bible or the Quran or anything else —," he rambled. Denise, exasperated, described him as "just an incredibly frustrating human." Eventually, Muller again denied having accomplices. "I guess the best I can do is say, look, every other thing that I’ve done was a lone actor situation. And I’m just sort of a loner generally." But Muller did provide intricate details on how he claimed to have tricked Denise and Aaron into believing he was working with a group. Vern Pierson explained, "He did various steps — to make it look as though he — had somebody else with him, there was multiple people — he told us that he had used — a — a device that he could make it sound as though he was — talking to somebody downstairs and getting a response using a recorder." Muller confirmed, "There was like a whisper track or something like that. And then I pretended to be whispering to someone at the same time." Despite Muller’s detailed explanation, Aaron remained skeptical. "I mean, I don’t believe everything Muller says," he asserted. "I know what we saw. We know what we heard."
Although Denise and Aaron didn’t receive the definitive answers they sought regarding accomplices, they found a form of reckoning in confronting Muller, even through the interviewers. Aaron explained, "For us, it was more — showing him that we’re not scared of you. We see you. We see who you are." They were determined to see Matthew Muller face justice for all the crimes their perseverance had uncovered. In June 2025, he was finally charged with Lynn’s attack and faced a life sentence for each of the additional crimes. Denise hoped this would finally ensure he remained incarcerated forever. "I don’t believe if he’s ever free, that he could help himself," she said. "I feel like he’ll always figure out a way to terrorize someone in some way."
By the summer of 2025, Matthew Muller was convicted of all the charges brought as a result of the new investigation spurred by Denise and Aaron. At Muller’s sentencing, "Lynn" read a victim impact statement, a powerful moment three decades in the making. "I think for so many years, feeling like my voice was silenced — feeling like my voice could be heard finally — felt very empowering — I got the last word. Now, you get to be silenced," she declared. Muller was sentenced to four life terms. Tracy Smith asked Chief Nick Borges about the feeling of Muller serving four life sentences for crimes that might never have been confessed to had Borges not written that letter. "Goosebumps. I have them right now," he replied. Lynn expressed immense relief, knowing Muller would remain locked up while she walked free, finally able to live without fear and enjoy old and new pastimes. She noted, "It’s — it’s easier now. And one of the ways that we were able to do that was through — playing disc golf — it gave me something to focus on outdoors that felt safe again." She has also connected with Denise, reaching out on Instagram. Denise tearfully recounted, "When I saw, you know, ‘I’m Matthew Muller’s first victim,’ like I — I was like, what?" Lynn expressed her gratitude: "I wanted to say thank you and just let her know — that 32 years of waiting was finally over because of her continuing to seek answers."
While Lynn finally had answers, Denise and Aaron still questioned whether Muller acted alone. D.A. Vern Pierson hoped forensics could provide clarity. He learned that Vallejo Police had only conducted preliminary testing on Denise’s rape kit, so his office had it fully tested in 2025. "Well, the results are essentially inconclusive," Pierson reported. The test showed a mixture of DNA, including Muller’s, meaning they couldn’t definitively rule out the possibility of another assailant. However, Pierson personally didn’t believe there was an accomplice. "Based on everything I know — I don’t believe that there was an accomplice. I think that was a ruse that — he created — and perpetuated very successfully." Chief Borges, however, remained unconvinced. "Do you think Muller had accomplices?" Tracy Smith asked. "I think it’s very possible. I — I certainly think it’s very possible," Borges responded. Both Borges and Pierson believed Muller committed additional crimes. "Everywhere that man traveled, he was a threat," Borges warned. He even considered the possibility of murder. "One of the times I interviewed him, I asked him if he ever killed anybody, it just seemed like an appropriate question. He kind of told me that he didn’t have the heart to do that." When asked if he believed him, Borges admitted, "Not fully. I — I don’t fully believe him. I mean, at what point do you actually stop?"
Borges affirmed that he hasn’t stopped investigating, actively looking for other crimes and potential accomplices. "If anyone else is involved, we’re coming for you. Just trust me. We’re going to get you if you’re involved," he vowed. Today, Denise and Aaron continue to speak to law enforcement agencies, tirelessly advocating for changes in how officers interview victims and suspects. Chief Borges emphasized the profound lesson he learned from Denise: "Denise has said — not being believed — was more traumatic in many ways to her than the actual assaults themselves. If that doesn’t open your eyes in law enforcement, something’s wrong with you." He stressed, "We have to believe victims. When they come forward, we have to listen to what they say and follow the evidence." Despite all they have endured, the Quinns believe their case, while exposing







