James “Weston” Higginbotham was seen entering the gates by himself at approximately 8:15 p.m. on the evening of May 29, according to the train station footage from Kyoto Station. His phone’s location signal vanished fourteen minutes later. Using the Life360 app, his family had been tracking his whereabouts and sending him texts as his location changed around the city. His mother later claimed that it was out of character when the signal stopped.
That was the 20-year-old Auburn University student’s last known whereabouts. Over a hundred police officers, K-9 units, aircraft, and eventually a group of volunteers would participate in the ensuing week-long search, which turned up information that official search efforts were unable to.

The Higginbotham family had gone to Japan to celebrate Weston’s younger brother’s high school graduation and his string of consecutive As. After arriving on May 25, they were traveling through Kyoto when the evening of May 29 took a new turn.
Weston broke away from the group and went on his own while his parents and brother went to a local temple due to an argument between him and his mother, allegedly over her usage of ChatGPT to navigate the trip. In general, it resembled the typical conflict that frequently arises on family trips. The result was everything but typical.
Typhoon Janmi, which swept through the area bringing flooding, landslides, and power outages—conditions that slow down any search in mountainous terrain, let alone one in an unfamiliar area for a young man who didn’t speak Japanese—almost immediately complicated Kyoto’s police mobilization efforts.
The route was days old when the weather improved sufficiently for a significant push. After around 72 hours, the formal police effort came to an end. At that point, the family organized volunteer search and rescue teams that could continue, operating from Alabama and through contacts in Japan.
Weston Higginbotham was regarded by many who knew him as someone who went on lengthy walks by himself in the woods of his native Alabama as a means to decompress rather than as a reckless inclination. Childhood neighbor Audrey Daniels, who grew up close to the family, told NBC News that she would recall him as a very intelligent, well-rounded individual who was a pleasure to be around.
He studied engineering with an emphasis on sustainable design and biosystems. The conversation he was having with his mother about the environmental cost of AI tools seemed more like a part of who he truly was than a small annoyance because of this detail about his interest in natural systems and sustainable practices.
At around 2:35 p.m. local time on June 6, 2026, volunteers exploring Kyoto’s mountainous Yamashina area discovered his body. No foul play is suspected, according to Japanese police who confirmed the findings. The reason of death has not been made public, and there is no sign that it will be in the near future. Nancy Higginbotham, his mother, posted the information on Facebook.
“We are forever grateful for the time we had with our sweet, precious Weston,” she said, “but cannot begin to understand what life without him will be like.” Other than the fact that sadness on this scale has its own form and seldom cleanly fits into whatever framework a news piece can provide, there is nothing simple to notice in a phrase like that.
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