It wasn't what she wanted so that next fall, she moved to a Keddie resort in rural Sierra, Nevada and moved into cabin #28.
Once there, she rented a small trailer in Claremont Trailer Village in Quincy. She decided to relocate to Northern California. This crime became the basis for the 2008 film The Strangers.Glenna Susan "Sue" Sharp along with her five kids, Tina, John, Shelia, Rick and Greg, left their home in Connecticut after she separated from her abusive husband, James Sharp. She maintains that this mysterious “no” was the victims’ continuing cry against their assailants-and that simply razing a building won’t quiet its ghosts. In 2004, Mollath razed Cabin 28.Īnnette Martin, a psychic in nearby Campbell, warns that victims of violent, unsolved crimes may stick around because their traumatized spirits don’t understand that they’re dead.
Mollath’s stepdaughter recounts once seeing the word “no” scrawled on the house’s door, with a pitchfork propped beside it-the next day, both the writing and the tool were gone. Locals say they’ve heard moans and the sound of slamming doors from the abandoned building and seen shadowy figures. After a period of decay and infestation by squatters, he again rented some of the cabins, but Cabin 28 remained empty, becoming the object of rumors of hauntings. Longtime owner, Gary Mollath, tried to sell the place and renovated it, but the tragedy made the once-beautiful place unattractive. The once-welcoming Keddie Cabins would subsequently fall into disrepair. From these discoveries, no new information regarding the crime surfaced in the media. Her jawbone and dozens of other bones were found, along with other potential evidence. An anonymous caller to the Butte County Sheriff’s office claimed the skull was Tina’s which proved to be true. In a gruesome coda, Tina’s head was found three years later near a waterfall fifty miles down the hill.