In a gripping interview ahead of the new BBC Three documentary *“My Unbelievable Kidnapping”*, British model **Chloe Ayling** revealed the survival strategy she believes saved her after being drugged and abducted in Milan in 2017. She said it was her **calm compliance—not panic—that ultimately secured her release** The Guardian detailed her reflections and **UNILAD provides fresh documentary insight** on her described tactics.
Ayling was lured under false pretenses to Milan, drugged with ketamine, placed in a bag, and driven north to a remote farmhouse near Turin—where she was told she’d be auctioned on the dark web by a group known as the **Black Death Gang**. But after six harrowing days, she was released without ransom and taken to the British consulate in Milan IBTimes recounts her trauma and court records confirm her release and survival timeline via documented case files.

“It was my calmness that saved me—I had to get him on side to be able to get out.”
In the documentary *My Unbelievable Kidnapping*, Ayling explains she chose not to confront her captor or attempt escape—instead going along with requests to hold his hand, shop for shoes, or eat a meal together. She later said she pretended to be his girlfriend, believing **trust was her only path to freedom** The Guardian describes her complex strategy and **Stylist features her quote** on press reactions.
Rather than bravery, Ayling framed the choice as survival instinct. Her lawyer insisted she was **not complicit**, explaining she followed orders to stay alive: “We do what we must to survive when threatened with death” CNN quoted legal defense**.
After returning to the UK, Ayling faced waves of skepticism. Footage of her calmly walking with her kidnapper in public, followed by composed press interviews, led tabloids and social media to accuse her of staging the event. She later described that online hatred as **hurtful and relentless**—saying people began to doubt her because she didn’t “weep or behave like they expected” as described in early interviews and the documentary delves deeper into that backlash according to critics.

Meanwhile, her captor—Łukasz Herba—was eventually convicted in Milan and sentenced to **16 years and 9 months** for kidnapping and extortion related to demands of approximately €300,000 ransom. His sentence was later reduced on appeal, but the convictions stood, affirming Ayling’s account in court per legal documentation.
Ayling now hopes the new documentary helps reshape public understanding of trauma behavior. Without tears or rage, she says her quiet resolve spoke louder—demonstrating that victims can survive without fitting stereotypes. “**A victim doesn’t have to be hysterical to be heard**,” she said commenting on media portrayal and Stylist published more of her reflection on emotional aftermath.
Today, Ayling advocates for trauma-informed responses, calling for compassion rather than condemnation. Her experience reframes the narrative: her calm was not complicity—it was connection, a desperate strategy that ultimately returned her home alive.