OH OH - James Higham III, 16, Youngstown, 3 Jan 2002

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James P. Higham, III

jph1.jpgjph.jpg

Case Classification: Endangered Missing / Suspected Homicide
Missing Since: January 03, 2002
Location Last Seen: Youngstown, Mahoning County, Ohio

Description:
  • Date of Birth: December 03, 1985
  • Age: 16 years old
  • Race: Biracial - White/Caucasian, Asian (Japanese)
  • Gender: Male
  • Height: 5' 10" (70 inches)
  • Weight: 160 lbs
  • Hair Color: Black/May be dyed red.
  • Eye Color: Brown
  • Nickname/Alias: Jimmy
  • Distinguishing Marks/Features: Mole on right cheek near his nose. He spoke Japanese and limited English.
  • Clothing & Personal Items: A black shirt, blue jeans, and sneakers.
  • Identifiers: Unknown
  • Other: Medical - James is mentally disabled; he has the learning capacity of a fourth-grader and suffers from emotional and developmental problems. He is supposed to take medication to help control his conditions, but he was off his medication at the time he disappeared.
Circumstances of Disappearance:
James was last seen by his guardians at their residence in Youngstown, Ohio on January 3, 2002. He has never been heard from again. He was living with his guardians, David Sharpe and Jennifer Lynn Snyder, in the 20 block of Manchester. They had been granted temporary legal custody of him in April 2001. Snyder is James' father's ex-wife's sister. His mother lives in Japan where he spent most of his early life, and his father was unable to care for him due to a drug addiction.

In March 2002, Sharpe and Snyder were charged with child endangerment in connection with James' disappearance. The charge was due to the fact that they did not report him missing for twenty-eight days. There has been speculation that the reason for the delay was that Snyder and Sharpe were receiving benefit checks from the government for James' care, and the benefits would have ceased if anyone realized he was no longer living with them.

Snyder and Sharpe told several contradicting stories about their care of him; for instance, Snyder claimed she was homeschooling him, then admitted that this was not true.

James's loved ones claim Snyder and Sharpe did not permit anyone to see or talk to James for months prior to his disappearance, and they suspected that there were problems between him and his guardians. They stated that his guardians had a histories of drug abuse and violent behavior and that they'd seen James many times with bruises on his body. Snyder and Sharpe had a dispute with James' doctors and stopped giving him his medication as a result. His loved ones claim they made many abuse reports to the county social services office, but the office lost his case file so it is impossible to determine what, if any, investigation was made.

No one else has seen or heard from James since January 2002, and no one besides his guardians claimed to have seen or heard from him since August 2001. Sharpe and Snyder reported James as a runaway, but his relatives and the police suspected foul play was involved in his case.

In 2007, while Snyder was serving a year in prison for probation violation in an unrelated case, she went to authorities and stated Sharpe had drowned and dismembered James. She was charged with child endangerment, permitting child abuse, gross abuse of a corpse and evidence tampering related to James's presumed death. Several months later, Sharpe was charged with murder, tampering with evidence, endangering children, permitting child abuse and gross abuse of a corpse in connection with James' case.

Authorities stated James had been drowned and dismembered on or around June 15, 2001. His remains were scattered in dumpsters throughout the Youngstown area and eventually ended up Carbon Limestone landfill in Poland, Ohio.

Snyder could have faced 23 years in prison if convicted of all the crimes she was charged with. In December 2007, she pleaded guilty to child endangerment and abuse of a corpse and was sentenced to four years in prison.

In February 2009, a week before his trial was scheduled to begin, Sharpe pleaded guilty to reckless homicide, attempted tampering of evidence, and gross abuse of a corpse. He was sentenced to the maximum term of seven and a half years in prison.

Investigators are searching for James' remains. Foul play is suspected in his case due to the circumstances involved.

Investigators:
  • Mahoning County Sheriff's Office: (330) 259-1731
    Reference Case Number: 02-567
NCIC Case Number: Not available
NamUs Case Number: MP8895
NCMEC Number: 939476

https://charleyproject.org/case/james-p-higham-ii
The National Missing and Unidentified Persons System (NamUs)
 
In memory of 16-year-old James.

His "guardians" sound like monsters and barely served any time in prison for what they pled guilty to/ whatever they did. That really wasn't much justice at all. My opinions.

It sounds unlikely his remains will be located, and that is so tragic.
 

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