The Cabin 28 Murders: A Botched Legacy

The Cabin 28 Murders: A Botched Legacy

4:06 Mar 6, 2026
About this episode
Discover the chilling story of the 1981 Keddie Murders, where a brutal crime scene was left unsolved for decades due to police errors and hidden confessions.[INTRO]ALEX: In 1981, a 14-year-old girl named Sheila Sharp walked into her family’s cabin in the Sierra Nevada mountains to find her mother, brother, and his friend tied up and brutally murdered—but her two younger brothers were in the next room, completely unharmed and still asleep.JORDAN: That’s terrifying. How do you sleep through a triple homicide in a small wooden cabin?ALEX: That is the mystery that has haunted Keddie, California for over forty years, especially because a fourth victim, 12-year-old Tina Sharp, was missing from the scene entirely.JORDAN: So we have a massacre, survivors who heard nothing, and a kidnapping? This sounds like the setup for a horror movie.[CHAPTER 1 - Origin]ALEX: It happened at the Keddie Resort, a former logging town that had turned into a bit of a rundown vacation spot by the early 80s.JORDAN: So we’re talking remote, heavily forested, and probably very quiet at night.ALEX: Exactly. Sue Sharp had moved her five kids there from Connecticut after leaving an abusive marriage, trying to start over in Cabin 28.JORDAN: And she thought a remote resort was the safe haven she needed.ALEX: On the night of April 11th, Sue was home with her youngest boys and their friend, Justin. Her oldest son John and his friend Dana were hitchhiking back from a nearby town.JORDAN: Who else was in the area? Was this a crowded resort?ALEX: It was tight-knit. Their neighbors included a man named Martin Smartt and his friend Bo Boubede, both of whom had criminal records and short fuses.JORDAN: Let me guess—these are our main suspects right out of the gate.ALEX: They should have been, but the world of 1981 Plumas County wasn't ready for a crime this savage.[CHAPTER 2 - Core Story]ALEX: When Sheila came home the next morning, the living room looked like a war zone.JORDAN: You mentioned they were tied up?ALEX: Yes, with medical tape and electrical wire. The killers used a hammer and a steak knife so violently that the knife actually bent.JORDAN: This feels personal—that’s a lot of up-close violence for a random robbery.ALEX: Investigation-wise, everything that could go wrong, did. The police allowed people to walk all over the crime scene, destroying footprints and blood patterns.JORDAN: Did they even interview the kids who were in the house?ALEX: They did, and one of the boys mentioned seeing men in the house, but the police basically ignored him.JORDAN: What about the neighbor, Martin Smartt? You said he had a temper.ALEX: Martin actually told the police his hammer had 'gone missing' that night, but they didn't even search his house.JORDAN: You’re joking. The guy basically hands them the murder weapon on a silver platter and they pass?ALEX: It gets worse. Ma
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