'This is a murder story': Warrants detail items, note found in home where mother, son were killed

Police investigate a double homicide on March 28 at a Saratoga Springs home where a mother and her 8-year-old son were shot to death. Newly unsealed search warrants offer a glimpse of the direction of the investigation.

Police investigate a double homicide on March 28 at a Saratoga Springs home where a mother and her 8-year-old son were shot to death. Newly unsealed search warrants offer a glimpse of the direction of the investigation. (Scott G Winterton, Deseret News)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Warrants reveal details in Saratoga Springs double homicide of a mother and her 8-year-old son.
  • Police reported finding a note in a 15-year-old son's room saying, "This is a murder story."
  • Surveillance footage shows a masked person near the crime scene.

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Newly unsealed search warrants offer previously undisclosed details about the killings of a Saratoga Springs mother and her 8-year-old son in March. The documents also provide insight into the direction of the investigation.

About 10:15 a.m. on March 28, Saratoga Springs police were called to Jessica Orton Lyman's townhome, 1244 N. Willowbrook Lane, after Lyman's 17-year-old daughter just arrived home, "where she found her mother and 8-year-old brother lying on the floor in her mother's bedroom," according to court records.

Detectives determined both Lyman and her son, 8-year-old Eli Painter, had been shot. Eli was pronounced dead at the scene. Lyman, 44, died from her injuries a couple of days later. Police are calling the case a double homicide.

The warrants were filed in April as police petitioned to have Google provide data from Lyman's and her 15-year-old son's email accounts.

Evidence found in Lyman's home

Lyman's daughter called 911 and reported that she found her mother and younger brother "lying in bed, unconscious and bleeding from their heads." She reported that her 15-year-old brother might also be at the home, according to the search warrant affidavits.

When officers arrived, they observed Lyman and Eli had both been shot in the head. Eli was declared dead. Jessica Lyman's underwear was "pulled around her knees," according to the warrant. She was taken to a hospital.

While police talked to the 15-year-old boy, he stated that he'd been in his room taking a nap and didn't hear anything. An officer asked him if there were weapons in the home, and the boy said he wasn't aware of any "guns" in the home, the warrant states.

"At that point, (the boy) had not been told by EMS or police officers that the incident involved a gun or gunshot wounds," police wrote in the warrant.

Lyman's daughter and the 15-year-old brother were interviewed at a Children's Justice Center, where the boy said he had been up late the previous night using his cellphone.

While executing a search warrant at the Lyman home, detectives found two .22-caliber shell casings and, while using an alternate light source, they found "dried seminal fluid on the sheets adjacent to where Jessica had been lying," the warrant states.

Detectives also found a variety of items in both Lyman's bedroom and the 15-year-old boy's room. The items included matching fishnet stockings, one of which was in Lyman's bedroom and the other in the teen's bedroom, according to the warrant. "Also found in (the teen's) bedroom were several pairs of small, female panties," police wrote.

The teen boy's cluttered bedroom was searched, and officers found two BB gun pistols, plate carriers and magazine pouches, and a handwritten note referencing "several forms of forensic evidence" including "serology," "DNA" and "firearm testing," according to the affidavit.

"(A detective) also located a second handwritten note stating, 'This is a murder story,'" the warrant states.

A doctor at Utah Valley Regional Medical Center told police he found suspicious seminal fluid on Lyman in the hospital.

Surveillance footage

Footage from two surveillance cameras provided by a neighbor captures a "wide area south and east" and homes across Willowbrook Lane and on Silvercrest Drive, which "eventually intersects" with Willowbrook Lane, where the Lyman home is.

Both of the cameras captured a person "exiting a gap" between two homes on Silvercrest Drive at about 2:30 a.m. on March 28. The person then walks short distances both north and south on Silvercrest Drive before turning north onto Willowbrook Lane, "only yards north of the Lyman residence," police said.

The person then approaches and enters a gap between two homes on Willowbrook Lane, walking east. Before walking out of view of the camera, the person pauses and puts "what appears to be a white mask over his face," according to the affidavit.

One of those homes is part of the same building as the Lyman townhome. East of the townhomes is a gravel path that runs unobstructed the length of and parallel to all the townhomes, including the Lymans'. The Lyman home can be accessed from that path through a gate or over a vinyl fence and through a sliding glass door into the basement, police wrote.

More doorbell camera footage from March 28 shows the person entering the gap between the two Silvercrest Drive homes at 2:30 a.m. and then returning to the same gap at 3 a.m.

"Nobody was captured either entering into or exiting from the gap for the rest of the night," police wrote.

Detectives observed several masks, including a light-colored one, at the Lyman home, according to the warrant. A second search warrant states police recovered a mask from the teen's room that is white and brown and "resembles the mask that is seen on the video recordings" provided by neighbors.

The home's sliding glass basement door was unsecured. "No efforts were made to dust and collect fingerprints from that door," the affidavit states, without explaining why.

No guns have been found in the investigation, police said.

Investigators received a forensic download of Lyman's phone and found a conversation between the mother and teen son from July 2024 in which the teenager sent profanity-laden messages calling her names and telling her to leave him alone. Some messages included: "I don't like you go away," "Do you need to learn how to shut your mouth," "I'm more happy when I'm not around you," "Shut up witch," "Do you know how insignificant you really are to my life? Very insignificant," and "I wish I died in your stomach."

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Ashley Imlay is an evening news manager for KSL.com. A lifelong Utahn, Ashley has also worked as a reporter for the Deseret News and is a graduate of Dixie State University.
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