A
man returned to his property in Oregon earlier this week only to find that
his log cabin was gone.
It wasn't wrecked from bad weather or bulldozed to the ground. The entire
building was just not there.
Police eventually found the cabin 3,750
feet away from its original location and now believe they have figured out who
took it.
The case appears to involve a
complicated ownership agreement regarding the property, a fire at the main
house on the land that displaced the people who had lived there, and changing
romantic relationships, according to investigators from the Klamath Falls
Sheriff's Department.
"Quite frankly, it's one of the
most unusual moments I've ever seen," Sheriff Frank Skrah said at a news
conference Thursday.
The approximately 1,200-square-foot
cabin was a secondary building on a larger property that was jointly-owned by
three individuals -- two men and a woman.
The man who reported the cabin
missing built it and was the only person listed on the home loan, sheriff's
officials said.
However, the second man allegedly then sold the cabin to a
neighbor without the owner's permission, the officials added.
The first man returned to the property
on Tuesday for the first time in months to find the log cabin missing and then
reported it to police.
Police were able to determine that the
neighbor who paid $3,000 for the cabin had no idea it was stolen.
The home was first listed as $10,000,
but the buyer was able to haggle down the price, officials said.
"To quote him, 'It was a steal of a
deal,'" a sheriff's department official said at a news conference on
Thursday.
The investigation is ongoing and no
charges have been filed.
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