Lawyer disputes police's hoax claim in California kidnapping
By GILLIAN FLACCUS, KRISTIN J. BENDER and ELLEN KNICKMEYER, Associated Press
Mar 26, 2015 4:32 PM CDT
Vallejo Police Lt. Kenny Park speaks to reporters about the abduction and ransom of Denise Huskins in Vallejo, Calif., Wednesday, March 25, 2015. Police in the San Francisco Bay Area say they're treating the case of a missing woman who reappeared in Southern California as a kidnapping-for-ransom until...   (Associated Press)

VALLEJO, Calif. (AP) — A lawyer disputes police claims that the kidnapping of a California woman was a hoax and says her boyfriend was bound and drugged during the abduction.

Attorney Dan Russo said Thursday his client Aaron Quinn did not immediately call police when his girlfriend Denise Huskins was abducted because at least two kidnappers "forced him to drink something" they said was a drug.

Investigators said they were suspicious when Quinn took hours to report that strangers broke into his home early Monday and abducted Huskins for an $8,500 ransom. Police could not be reached for comment Thursday.

Huskins turned up safe Wednesday in Huntington Beach. Police later revealed they had no proof of a kidnapping and believed it was a hoax.

After the investigation turned to the couple, police said they were unable to contact either Huskins or her family members by Wednesday's end and do not know where she is.

Police questioned Quinn for 17 hours, Russo said.

Huskins had indicated she would talk to detectives, and the FBI arranged to have her flown back to Northern California, police said. She also hired an attorney, but the lawyer's name was not released.

Jeff Kane, Huskins' uncle, disputed that the family was avoiding calls from police. He said because he's a lawyer, he has an ethical obligation to not reveal any discussion with Huskins.

Mike Huskins said his daughter called him Wednesday to say she was dropped off at her mother's Huntington Beach house. No one was there, so she said she walked the 12 blocks to his home.

Both parents had traveled to Northern California to help with the search.

"She wasn't crying at all. She just said, 'Daddy, I'm OK,'" an emotional Mike Huskins told The Associated Press on Wednesday. "I feel very relieved. Can you imagine? You can't unless you've experienced it."

Quinn called police around 2 p.m. Monday to report that Denise Huskins was forcefully taken from their Mare Island home in Vallejo in the middle of the night.

Vallejo police Lt. Kenny Park said the delay is part of what aroused suspicions.

"It was such an incredible story, we initially had a hard time believing it," Park said. "Upon further investigation, we couldn't substantiate any of the things he was saying."

It was unclear whether police have spoken with Quinn since they determined the case was a hoax. Park said he was "free on his own" for now and would not say whether the two might have had any accomplices.

Police expressed disgust at the resources squandered — saying more than 40 detectives worked on the case — and the fear the couple instilled in the community with a report of random violence.

"Devoting all of our resources 24 hours a day in a wild goose chase, it's a tremendous loss," Park said. "It's disappointing. It's disheartening."

In another bizarre twist in the case, the San Francisco Chronicle received an email Tuesday from an anonymous person claiming to be holding Denise Huskins. The person wrote that she would be returned safely Wednesday, the newspaper reported.

"We will send a link to her location after she has been dropped off. She will be in good health and safe while she waits," the email read. "Any advance on us or our associates will create a dangerous situation for Denise. Wait until she is recovered and then proceed how you will. We will be ready."

It included an audio file of a woman identifying herself as Denise Huskins, who mentioned Tuesday's airliner crash in the French Alps to verify she was alive. Her father confirmed the voice in the file was his daughter's, the Chronicle reported.

Police asked the newspaper to wait to reveal the email until the voice was verified, Park said.

Huskins' uncle described her as principled, career-oriented, independent and strong. She works as a physical therapist at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Vallejo.

"She's a good girl, not into any bad things," Kane said.

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Flaccus reported from Huntington Beach; Bender reported from San Francisco. Associated Press writers Andrew Dalton and John Antczak in Los Angeles and Olga Rodriguez in San Francisco contributed to this report.

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