The 8 P.M. Kyoto Video: What Happened After James “Weston” Higginbotham Walked Alone Toward Yamashina?

By International News Desk

The final confirmed trace of James “Weston” Higginbotham is not a scream.

It is not a struggle.

It is a young American student walking alone in Kyoto.

That image has now become the center of a growing online theory: that CCTV from the Yamashina area may show someone following Weston before his phone, GPS location and last digital trace suddenly vanished.

Authorities have not confirmed that claim.

What public reports have confirmed is that Weston, a 20-year-old Auburn University student, was last seen after separating from his family during a trip to Japan. Surveillance reportedly placed him at Yamashina station around 8:15 p.m. on May 29. His phone lost connection shortly afterward, around 8:29 p.m.

That 14-minute window has become one of the most haunting pieces of the timeline.

Weston had left his family after a disagreement during the trip. He was known as a nature lover and experienced traveler, and reports say his family believed he may have been drawn toward the nearby mountain trails. Yamashina is not only an urban district. It also sits near wooded paths, steep terrain and access points that can become dangerous after dark, especially during bad weather.

The rumor now spreading online goes further.

It claims neighborhood CCTV showed Weston walking alone toward a trail area — and that another figure may have followed him for nearly three kilometers before his phone went dark.

No official source has verified that a person followed Weston. No police statement has identified a suspect. No confirmed CCTV release has shown a second person trailing him. Japanese police have said they do not suspect foul play.

But the reason the theory is gaining attention is clear.

If Weston’s phone stopped working near an unexpected point, investigators would need to answer whether that happened because of battery loss, signal failure, a deliberate shutdown, terrain interference, weather, injury, or human involvement.

Each possibility changes the emotional meaning of the timeline.

If his battery died, the tragedy may have been a lonely accident in unfamiliar mountains.

If he turned the phone off, it may suggest he wanted space from messages and did not realize how quickly conditions could change.

If the signal vanished because of terrain, the mountains themselves may have erased the only tool that could have saved him.

But if someone was truly following him, the case would become something very different.

That is why the alleged “3km follower” claim cannot be treated as fact without confirmation. In a missing-person case, one unclear shadow on video can become a suspect online before investigators even determine whether the figure is connected. A pedestrian walking the same route, a resident returning home, a hiker, or a camera-angle illusion can all become part of a viral theory.

Still, the 8 p.m. footage matters.

It may help reconstruct Weston’s final decision: whether he moved toward a trail intentionally, whether he appeared calm or disoriented, whether he carried supplies, whether he looked behind him, and whether anyone else appeared close enough to matter.

The confirmed tragedy is already painful.

Weston vanished on May 29. His family reported him missing after he stopped responding and his location was turned off. Search teams, police, helicopters, K9 units and volunteers searched through difficult mountain terrain. His body was found on June 6 in the mountains outside Kyoto.

Police have not released his cause of death publicly.

They have also said they do not believe another person caused it.

But unanswered questions remain.

Why did his digital trail end so suddenly?

Why did he move toward a mountain area at night?

Did he know the route?

Did weather or darkness trap him?

And if CCTV captured his final walk through Yamashina, did it show a young man seeking quiet — or the beginning of a danger no one recognized in time?

For now, the claim that someone followed Weston for three kilometers remains unverified.

But the final confirmed image still chills the case:

A student alone in Kyoto.

A phone going silent minutes later.

And a mountain trail that gave back his body, but not every answer.