A University of Mississippi student who disappeared in 2022 was a happy person who spoke with his mother daily and called her every year to sing happy birthday, his mom testified Tuesday in the trial of the man charged with killing her son.
Stephanie Lee of Jackson, Mississippi, said her 20-year-old son, Jimmy ''Jay'' Lee, texted her at about 2 a.m. on July 8, 2022, to wish her a happy birthday. She said she saw the text when she woke up later, and she responded with a smile emoji, expecting to hear from him again. She said he never called.
Sheldon ''Timothy'' Herrington Jr. of Grenada, Mississippi, is charged with capital murder in the death of Jay Lee, a gay man who was last seen alive in Oxford hours after he sent the birthday text to his mother.
Tuesday was the first day of Herrington's trial in Oxford, and Stephane Lee testified after attorneys made their opening arguments. She said she worried when hours passed and her son didn't call her to sing for her birthday.
Stephanie Lee said she checked Jay's phone location, called police multiple times asking them to do a welfare check on her son and had her oldest child reach out to one of Jay's friends to have that friend check Jay's apartment.
The friend, Jose' Reyes, testified Tuesday that he did not find Jay but said he could hear Jay's beloved Pomeranian dog, Lexus — nicknamed Lexie — barking inside.
Jay Lee was well-known in the LGBTQ+ community in Oxford and the University of Mississippi. His body has not been found. In October, a judge declared him dead after Lee's parents requested that declaration.
Herrington has maintained his innocence.