The Deck - Sharon Jones (10 of Spades, Florida)
Episode Date: March 19, 2025Our card this week is Sharon Jones, the 10 of Spades from Florida. The last known people to see Sharon Jones alive around Thanksgiving weekend in 1987 have something in common. They all attended the ...same apartment party. And when the young woman showed up dead several days later…stories started swirling about what actually went down that night. More than 37 years later, her family’s still hearing remnants of these rumors…rumors they’re hoping someone out there can help them put to rest once and for all…If you know anything about the murder of Sharon Jones in Naples, Florida in 1987, we hope you’ll come forward for this family. You can remain anonymous by submitting a tip through Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers online or by calling them at 1-800-780-8477.Additional ways to contact Naples Police directly:Napes Police Department AppNumber for Naples Police Department: (239) 213-3000Lieutenant Robert Young’s Desk Line: (239) 213-4823Email for Naples Police Department: police@naplesgov.comLieutenant Robert Young’s Email: ryoung@naplesgov.com View source material and photos for this episode at: thedeckpodcast.com/sharon-jones Let us deal you in… follow The Deck on social media.Instagram: @thedeckpodcast | @audiochuckTwitter: @thedeckpodcast_ | @audiochuckFacebook: /TheDeckPodcast | /audiochuckllcTo support Season of Justice and learn more, please visit seasonofjustice.org.The Deck is hosted by Ashley Flowers. Instagram: @ashleyflowersTikTok: @ashleyflowerscrimejunkieTwitter: @Ash_FlowersFacebook: /AshleyFlowers.AF Text Ashley at 317-733-7485 to talk all things true crime, get behind the scenes updates, and more!
Transcript
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Our card this week is Sharon Jones, the 10 of spades from Florida.
The last known people to see Sharon Jones alive around Thanksgiving weekend in 1987
have something in common.
They all attended the same party.
And when the young woman showed up dead several days later, stories started swirling about
what actually went down that night.
More than 37 years later,
her family's still hearing remnants of these rumors.
Rumors they're hoping someone out there
can help put to rest once and for all.
I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is the deck. It was early in the evening on December 4, 1987, when a guy named Grady made an unexpected
pit stop at a vacant lot in Naples, Florida to take a leak. It was a poorly lit industrial area,
especially at night, you know, December,
around 5, 30, 6 o'clock.
It's getting dark.
There's junk back there.
People throw their garbage.
There's some vegetation back there.
It's in between two industrial buildings.
Nobody's looking back there for bodies,
but, you know, he notices something
a little to his right and he realizes this is a decomposing body. And when he's done
going to the bathroom, he gets back in the car. And I believe initially he didn't go to the police. I believe he went home first and told someone,
and then they went to the lobby of the police department
and told them, hey, there may be a body
located in the alleyway just north of Central Avenue
on 12th Street.
That was Lieutenant Robert Young.
He told our reporter that officers with the Naples PD
went out to the scene and found the decomposed body of a woman who had been dumped, hidden away in a dark corner along
with trash and debris.
She's bound behind her back with a red dress that was torn apart and it was used to bind
her as well as wrapped around her neck to possibly strangle her.
You can see the ligature around her neck and her arms that are bound.
Looked like she had bindings on her ankles, but over the course of days,
they somehow came apart or they were never put on that tightly.
With her torn dress used as bindings and ligatures, she was left completely nude.
And investigators didn't locate any undergarments at the scene. Due to her state of decomp, they assumed that she'd been left there for at least a few days or so. And it wasn't that
shocking that she hadn't been found until now, considering most people would have no reason to
venture into that area. So detectives collected everything they could
from everywhere they could, high and low.
On the ground, they didn't get much,
aside from the pieces of cloth from her dress.
Everything else just appeared to be random litter
that was likely already there before their victim.
But they didn't stop looking there.
And then they also went to check the rooftops,
and they found she had a pair of beige slides, slippers,
and they were actually found on the roof of this building.
You just check to see if any evidence was thrown.
Maybe a knife was, maybe a weapon was thrown over there.
So you got to do your due diligence,
and you check the whole entire area."
I was honestly pretty impressed that they went as far as to check the roof. I know you can never be too sure upon first glance, but it didn't look like the victim had taken a
fall or anything. And since this looked like a strangulation case, I'm not sure what they
were expecting to find up there. But find they did, though they think that the shoes
were tossed up there for some unknown reason,
rather than her having actually been up there
before her death.
With nothing but her dress and shoes,
detectives didn't have a clue as to who she was.
But the folks in the River Park community
were starting to talk, and they had a pretty good idea.
Well, there was a rumor going around that a body was found, and they gave a description.
And then they finally found out that it was my sister.
That was Von Seale, and her sister was 27-year-old Sharon Jones.
And the police department called me because I worked for the city at the
time so they knew me. They called me in to tell me that it was my sister that
they found over by the Naples Daily News. She was struggling with the drug abuse. I
must admit at first I was giving her money to support her habit because I
didn't want her to do that,
you know, what they do to support the habit.
And then my husband said, Bon, say you just enable her, stop doing that.
And I did.
Eventually it was hard.
And we talked and I tried to get her off.
The tough love didn't work.
I mean, nothing worked.
It was her fingerprints on file that confirmed, at autopsy, the rumors Van Seel was hearing.
The autopsy also confirmed what investigators had already assumed.
Sharon's cause of death was ligature strangulation, the makeshift ligature being her own dress.
There were no signs of sexual assault, and there were also no obvious signs of trauma
that could have come from some type of assault or beating.
The ME estimated that she had likely been dead around four or five days.
And detectives were able to pinpoint November 26th as the last day one of her sisters had
contact with her.
But they needed to nail down who she'd been spending time with around then. The detectives go down to the area where all the drug dealers and drug users hang out or
reside.
So they get some information that there was a party.
And during this party, these were the five or six individuals that were present.
Sharon was one of them.
Girls were expected to exchange sexual favors for crack cocaine, which was very popular at the time.
And two of the people that were present were Arthur Neesmith and Robert Ruscha. And we had at least two people, females that were present there, who stated that Sharon
went into a room with those two subjects.
You had people there who were in this apartment who all had criminal histories.
So everyone pretty much at the party has given a statement
with the exception of those two guys.
And even to this day, you know,
when we tried to interview them,
Rachade just gets angry and shouts,
he had nothing to do with it.
And Neesmith says, I have an attorney,
I'm not making any statements.
There were two party attendees
who were willing to talk though.
Two women who, to protect their identities, were going to call Maria and Monica.
A weird coincidence, if you believe in coincidences.
Monica was actually in the car with Grady when he accidentally stumbled upon Sharon's
body.
Admittedly, these two women were both under the influence that night. So while their memories were a bit hazy,
their stories revolving around Robert and Arthur
are nearly identical, and I think speak to their credibility.
They were also both seemingly open about their involvement
in other illegal activity, like substance use and sex work.
So they truly appeared to be acting in good faith
when they spoke with law enforcement
during the initial investigation,
as well as throughout the following years.
Here are voice actors reading from a section of a transcript
from one of Maria's interviews with the detective
as she recollected the sequence of events involving Sharon in more detail.
Please note some parts have been cut and slightly edited for time and clarity.
Okay, what happened to Sharon?
Well, what happened, I don't know, but I can tell you what happened, what I seen.
Okay?
That's okay.
We went in, and the agreement was she was going to trick Nie Smith for drugs.
Okay.
But we all started smoking because she was so high, she was paranoid and shaky, and he
was pushing her to, come on, take her clothes off.
He wanted to have sex.
And she was so high, you know, she kept telling, wait, wait, wait, wait.
And he was waiting and she was really, really high and like, we heard a noise and then when we opened the door, he had slapped her.
I really... It's been a long time.
Okay. Take your time.
It's something I try to forget about. I don't remember, but I know he hit her. He hit her.
Okay. There was another guy there. Okay. But I know he hit her He hit her okay
There was another guy there, okay?
Neesmith when he hit her Sharon hit the floor and like passed out, okay?
Was he freaking out or was he calm?
He was mad
He was really mad and I went when I went in to say something he told me to shut up where he was gonna
Hit me, too, okay mad and I went, when I went in to say something, he told me to shut up or he was gonna hit me too."
Okay.
What did they do with Sharon?
I know that Nie Smith went to grab her up and the other guy had her feet.
Okay.
And they said, because I said, where are you going?
Where are you going?
And they said that she was really f-ed up and they were taking her home.
It seems like Maria was eventually able to identify Robert Ruscha as the other man she'd
been referring to during that interview.
Both Maria and Monica remembered Sharon being hauled out of the apartment and into a vehicle
outside, but neither woman remembered her being tied up in any way when she was carried
off.
So it seems most likely that Sharon was unconscious and wasn't actually deceased when she was
taken away.
Since we know that she was tied up and that her cause of death was strangulation, the
murder likely occurred after the group left the apartment.
Through word of mouth, detectives eventually figured out that it was likely one of the
partygoers, a guy who went by Sean, who Neesmith
and Riche used as their getaway driver.
They asked him to drive his vehicle to the back of 9B, and that's where they assumed
Sharon was placed through the window into the back seat of a car, and that was the last
time that she was seen by any of the people present there at the party."
Investigators talked to Sean while he was in jail for drug possession, and he was reluctant.
He threw out two names of other men at the party as probably being responsible, one being
Robert Richet, but he didn't appear to disclose why he thought this.
We don't have any details about how he reacted when he was specifically confronted
about his car being used in a crime. But Lieutenant Young said that he thinks the car may have
been like a shared car that a lot of different people who stayed in that apartment would
use. So maybe that could have been his excuse to keep the heat off of him. But either way,
detectives did locate the Chevy station wagon to search and process.
They would have looked for hairs, any type of blood, any type of evidence indicates a
violent act occurred in the rear of that vehicle.
Because at the time, nobody was scouring for DNA.
You would just look for the presence of blood, hairs, things of that nature, and there was
nothing recovered of evidentiary
value from that vehicle."
Outside of Maria and Monica, who were cooperative, and Arthur and Robert, who remained silent,
it sounds like the other party guests had varying degrees of participation with law
enforcement.
Some of them played dumb and denied even being there at all, while others said that they
hadn't really been paying attention to what Sharon was up to
and denied seeing her past a certain time.
But there was one brave soul who came out of the woodwork,
supposedly ready to spill it all, a guy named John.
He was older than everyone else
and was the main tenant on the apartment lease,
though it seemed like a lot of other people lived there
kinda on and off.
And while he didn't seem to be actively partaking in the events of that night, he had been present there.
He was very sick. I don't know whether it was through genetics or drug abuse.
Both don't know, but he lived there. A lot of people lived there.
Robert Ruscha was also a tenant there.
John is hospitalized shortly afterwards, and he's on his deathbed for lack of a better
term.
And he wants to provide one of our detectives a complete deathbed confession about what
took place there.
And by the time our detective got to the hospital he had passed." As frustrating as this was, I don't know how much of a difference it would have made for
detectives.
While different names have been thrown out over the years in regard to exactly who was
responsible for killing Sharon Jones, we don't have any witness accounts that put John as
the perp.
So most likely, he would have just been another witness to back up Maria and Monica's story,
and we know that that alone hasn't been enough for an arrest.
What they really needed was a confession from someone who actually participated in the crime.
And wouldn't you know it, the very next year, in 1988, Robert was also at the hospital when he told detectives he
had something he wanted to get off of his chest, too.
Detective Vargas was contacted at his residence to respond to the Naples Community Hospital concerning
Robert Ruscha.
He requested to speak with the detective to make statements about the murder.
He said, I need to speak with Victor.
Tell him I can solve the murder case for him.
Well, so the detective gets dressed and drives down there.
And he goes, I was advised that Richet had been smoking crack cocaine.
And when I entered the emergency room,
he was in tears,
relating that he needed to talk with me.
However, it seemed like Robert Richet may have sobered up
because the detective wrote that he quickly came
to his senses and had nothing to say.
But all wasn't lost with this second letdown,
because one of their more obliging partygoers, Monica,
had something up her sleeve,
a plan to get Arthur Neesmith talking.
She goes, he'll talk to me, he'll talk to me about anything.
So she meets with the vice narcotics guys,
they get her out of jail, and they wire her up, getting a drug deal going
down and she's going to go there and she no shows.
So they then like, hey, you're out.
We got you out of jail right now.
So we're responsible for you.
So then like a couple of weeks ago, she finally said, okay, okay, we can do the deal.
I told him what I need.
He's going to go get the drugs and then he's going to go back to his apartment. So they got her all wired up and our detectives at the time,
the narcotics guys who were orchestrating this whole thing,
they got their cover blown.
She goes to the house and was like,
okay, yeah, what is the thing?
He gives her her $100 back and says,
get the fuck out of my apartment.
It doesn't seem like Arthur even knew the plan was for Monica to bring up Sharon in
an attempt to get him to talk about what went down the night of the party.
I think he just assumed that she was helping the narcotics team nail him for selling drugs.
But once Arthur caught on to the fact that he was being watched, it was a bust.
Being from a family originally from Naples that still lives there today, Sharon's loved
ones, including the three children she left behind, have heard plenty of talk around town
over the past few decades about her homicide.
Some of them didn't even realize how violent her death had been until they read the write-up
on her card, the one featured in the Southwest Florida Crimestoppers playing deck.
One of Sharon's daughters, Sharonda, actually ran into the woman we'd been
calling Maria some years ago.
She stopped me at Walmart and she was like, I know you.
I'm looking at it like, no, you don't know me.
She was like, yeah, I know you.
You were a little girl back then. Your mom's name Sharon? And I just looked at like, how, I know you. You were a little girl back then.
Your mom's name Sharon?
And I just looked at like, how would you know that?
And she was like, I wanna talk to you.
So back then she gave me her numbers and I called her.
I went over, she stayed in Harmony Shores.
I went over and she sat me down.
She said I was there that night
and I'ma give you a name.
His name is Nece Smith. He was there that night and I'm gonna give you a name. His name is
Nece Smith. He was there. He did it and I haven't seen her since. I haven't heard
anything from her. I haven't seen her. I tried to call her like a week later, gone.
She wasn't at Harmony Shores no more or anything. The one that does come up more
than the other is that they were all hanging out and there was a disagreement over some drugs or whatever.
And that's how it broke out.
So my question was to them, okay, so the fight broke out,
y'all just let this happen.
And somehow he's taking her out the window in the back.
There's a blood trail going down the window and none of y'all said anything.
I don't believe it."
It's hard for the family to imagine their fierce Sharon being in such a vulnerable spot.
Here's her other daughter, Jaquanetta, talking with Sharonda about what they've heard from others
about their mom's tough and independent personality. When Sharon was murdered, Sharonda was only a toddler and Jaquanetta was around seven.
A people's person, they did say that she got along with everybody, but she didn't
take any BS from no one.
She didn't care who it was.
And no one mess with the sisters.
You were six of them.
No one.
And I dare you to, and guess who's coming?
Sharon.
Shiri.
She's coming.
About her sisters.
To the point where even the cops will have to call my grandmother
to come get this lady from beating up someone who threatened her sister.
The family feels that the truth has to lie somewhere in the story surrounding that fateful
night.
The same details circulating around the same people have been repeated so many times, there
just has to be something to it.
But realistically, they know that it might take forensics to push things forward.
And that is something that Lieutenant Young has been working on.
He made a big push to resubmit evidence for testing back in 2021,
with the bindings and ligatures made from her dress
being the items he thought would be the most promising.
But unfortunately, none of it came back with any foreign DNA.
And as technology for touch DNA like MVAC improves,
hope does remain for giving it another shot,
maybe in the future.
There's DNA on file for both Arthur and Robert,
so detectives would have something for comparison
should anything pop up.
Lieutenant Young said that they are the only two persons
of interest ever produced during the investigation.
So, of course, our reporting team reached out
to both of them for this episode.
While Robert wouldn't participate in a formal interview,
he did text back.
Among other things, he said that he knows nothing
about the case, can't contribute to finding a suspect,
and that his conscience is clear.
He said he didn't know Sharon
and that he's sad for the family.
He also said he was only ever briefly in Naples.
And during a short five minute phone call,
Arthur seemed like he was possibly open
to speaking on this podcast,
after mentioning he didn't know how he got caught up in this,
but he said he wanted to clear his name.
He asked if our reporter could talk to his brother first
before he answered any of our questions,
but our reporter never heard from anyone in his family, and when she tried to reach back out to
him to see if he's still planned on talking, as of this recording, he hasn't responded.
So if there is someone out there somewhere who is willing to set the record straight,
detectives and Sharon's family are all ears. At least with this podcast, they feel some sense of comfort
knowing Sharon's story has been put out there.
She's someone that they will surely never forget.
And maybe now she'll be on your mind too.
She was a sister, a mother, and a daughter.
And she's somebody's child.
And because she's on drug does not make her less.
And that's what I thought when I talked to the police department and that's why they said what
they said. We're going to treat this like she was the mayor's daughter and I appreciated that.
If you know anything about the murder of Sharon Jones in Naples, Florida in 1987,
we hope you'll come forward for this family.
You can remain anonymous by submitting a tip through Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers online or by calling them at 1-800-780-8477.
We're also going to have all of the ways that you can contact the Naples Police directly in the show notes and on the blog post for this episode. The Deck is an AudioChuck production with theme music by Ryan Lewis.
To learn more about The Deck and our advocacy work, visit the deck podcast.com.
So what do you think Chuck? Do you approve?