WFLA

Mother shares pain after learning daughter is Baby Jane Doe

OPELIKA, Ala. (WRBL) – The mother of Amore Wiggins speaks out for the first time since Opelika police identified her daughter as Baby Jane Doe, and announced the child’s father and step-mother were under arrest. Sherry Wiggins was 20 when she gave birth to a baby girl in Virginia.

“She was a blessing. She was smart and she was special and that’s why I named her Amore which in Spanish means love,” said Wiggins.

Wiggins met Amore’s father, Lamar Vickerstaff, when she was 19. Lamar was 35 and in the Navy. They lived in the same apartment complex. Later, they moved in together after Sherry discovered she was pregnant.

However, Sherry says Vickerstaff’s family was disappointed with him having a child out of wedlock. The pair had no intentions of getting married.

“He was upset and bothered and when he started shoving me, it was then I knew needed to figure something out,” said Wiggins.

Wiggins moved out and says Vickerstaff was an absent father. So, she went to court to try and get child support. Then, Sherry admits to making mistakes. She was facing misdemeanor charges, and felt Amore would be better off with her dad, and his wife Ruth.

“It did make sense for her to be somewhere more stable,” said Wiggins.

Sherry was still visiting with her daughter until she says Lamar moved with the Navy to Hawaii.

“I reached out and he said why the hell are you calling me on the phone, I am not making no special arrangements for you to see your child. He said you don’t care about her and she is okay here with us,” said Wiggins.

Sherry says she went to court several times trying to force Lamar to resume visitations and regain custody of her daughter. But by 2013 she says the court informed her her appeals were exhausted. Sherry says the only thing she could do to connect with her daughter was continue paying the child support she had been responsible for since 2009.

“I felt like they made me feel so bad about myself. Kept trying and the doors kept being closed. I felt like the best I could do was live out my financial obligation, that which I never stopped. I felt like one day I could tell her I never gave up on you and I all I could do was take care of you financially, and that is what I did. If I couldn’t do anything I could take care of my daughter by supporting my child financially,” said Wiggins.

Sherry never imagined her daughter was being harmed. She did feel Ruth and Lamar Vickerstaff had brainwashed Amore against her, but had hoped to reconnect with Amore when she turned 18. However, in December of 2022 the dream of reconciliation shattered when Opelika Police visited Wiggins in Maryland. DNA testing had indicated Lamar Vickerstaff was the father of a little girl Opelika police called Baby Jane Doe. A child whose remains were located January 28th, 2012 who investigators say had been murdered and dumped behind a mobile home off Hurst Street.

“When they showed me the clay pictures of her, I felt that in my soul.  I felt that in my soul. It was 7:36 in the morning and the DNA test had come back. He called and said I don’t want to tell you this on the phone, but it is her.  It is Amore.  I hate to tell you this way. It’s been hard, its been so hard.  I think of all the times I tried to see her and get her, all the times I called. I was a phone call away. They could have just called me,” said Wiggins.

Wiggins says while some in the community have been supportive of her, a lot of people have passed judgement without knowing the full story. She says it does hurt, but the only thing that matters now is getting justice for Amore. Sherry says she’s grateful to the Opelika Police Department for never giving up.

Previous Coverage:

Jan. 19, 2023 | Her name is Amore. Opelika Police uncover Baby Jane Doe’s identity, father arrested 

Jan. 19, 2023 | WATCH HERE: Full press conference on Baby Jane Doe, now identified as Amore Wiggins

Jan. 18, 2023 | Opelika Police, FBI search near Baby Jane Doe site, will not confirm connection

Jan. 18, 2023 | Opelika Police set to reveal significant update in Baby Jane Doe case

Nov. 23, 2022 | Search for Opelika’s Baby Jane Doe’s killer expands to Virginia, North Carolina

Feb. 7, 2022 | Investigators remain hopeful in identifying Opelika Baby Jane Doe one decade after her discovery

Nov. 11, 2021 | CrimeStoppers offering $5k reward for identity of Opelika Baby Jane Doe

Oct. 9, 2021 | Updated forensic images released in Opelika’s Baby Jane Doe case

Oct. 9, 2021 | New images: Opelika Police Department continues to investigate 2012 Jane Doe cold case

Jan. 21, 2020 | Opelika’s Baby Jane Doe remains unnamed eight years after remains discovered

May. 6, 2020 | Opelika investigators hope sharper images turn focus on “Baby Jane Doe” killer