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Tag: murder conviction

  • Cabazon man convicted of killing infant son sentenced

    Jake Haro cries in court after pleading guilty to all charges, including second-degree murder of his 7-month-old son, Emmanuel, at the Riverside Hall of Justice in Riverside, Calif., on Thursday, Oct 16, 2025. (Will Lester/The Orange County Register via AP, Pool)

    A Southern California father who pleaded guilty to killing his missing 7-month-old son was sentenced Monday to more than 30 years in prison.

    Jake Haro, 32, was sentenced after he pleaded guilty last month to the second-degree murder of his son, Emmanuel, the Riverside County District Attorney’s office said in a statement. A monthslong investigation has failed to locate the child’s remains.

    Haro and his wife, Rebecca, had reported the baby was kidnapped outside a store in Southern California in August, saying Rebecca Haro was attacked and left unconscious while changing the boy’s diaper. The case drew widespread attention as authorities and members of the public fanned out to search for the boy.

    The couple were arrested a little more than a week later at their home in the desert community of Cabazon, some 20 miles west of Palm Springs, after Rebecca Haro was confronted about inconsistencies in their account.

    Riverside County Superior Court Judge Gary Polk sentenced Haro to seven years and two months in prison for a probation violation and other charges, then 25 years to life for assault on a child under age 8, according to the Press-Enterprise. The sentences will run consecutively.

    Haro was also ordered to pay $10,000 in restitution.

    Rebecca Haro, 41, has pleaded not guilty and is being held on $1 million bail. She is due to appear in court in January.

    Riverside County prosecutors asked for Jake Haro to be sentenced to 31 years to life in prison for killing Emmanuel and for assaulting another child in 2018. Haro pleaded guilty to child endangerment for causing severe and lasting injuries to his then-10-month-old daughter and was given a 6-year suspended prison term that prosecutors said should now be applied.

    “Jake Haro murdered seven-month-old Emmanuel but, in reality, he comes before this court having taken the lives of two young children. If there are lower forms of evil in this world, I am not aware of them,” Brandon Smith, assistant district attorney in Riverside County, wrote in court filings.

    A message seeking comment was sent to Jake Haro’s attorney, Allison Lowe.


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  • Attorney representing victim’s family in Adnan Syed case reacts to reinstatement of murder conviction – WTOP News

    Attorney representing victim’s family in Adnan Syed case reacts to reinstatement of murder conviction – WTOP News

    Maryland’s highest court has reinstated Adan Syed’s murder conviction and ordered a new hearing in a lower court in Baltimore that vacated his conviction two years ago.

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    Attorney representing victim’s family in Adnan Syed case reacts to reinstatement of murder conviction

    Maryland’s highest court has reinstated Adan Syed’s murder conviction and ordered a new hearing in a lower court in Baltimore that vacated his conviction two years ago.

    The case gained national attention when it was the topic of the popular “Serial” podcast.

    Syed spent decades in prison, convicted of murder of his ex-girlfriend Hae Min Lee in 1999.

    His murder conviction was vacated and then all charges were dropped in 2022 after prosecutors in Baltimore said there were issues with the evidence in the case.

    Hae Min’s brother, Young Lee, has been fighting ever since, claiming the legal rights of his family were violated as a result of that first hearing.

    David Sanford is the attorney representing Young Lee. He joined WTOP’s Anne Kramer and John Domen to break down the latest development in this legal saga.

    The transcript below has been lightly edited for clarity.

    David Sanford, the attorney representing Young Lee, speaks with WTOP’s Anne Kramer and John Domen about the latest development in the case of Adnan Syed.

    John Domen: What is your reaction to the Maryland Supreme Court ruling? What did your clients have to say about the decision, too?

    David Sanford: Well, we are all delighted. The client is relieved. This case has been around for more than two decades now. We have a murder conviction of Adnan Syed, going back over 20 years. This case has been subjected to appeals up and down, all the way to the Supreme Court of the United States, now to the Maryland Supreme Court. And at the end of the day, this is a victory for victims’ rights. And ultimately, Adnan Syed will have an opportunity to present whatever evidence he has in order to show that the conviction should effectively be overturned.

    Anne Kramer: This ruling was 187 pages long. Can you explain, in the simplest terms for us, the argument that you all made on behalf of Young Lee when it comes to the legal rights for the victim’s family involved in that hearing for Adnan Syed? Because didn’t your client appear virtually for that hearing?

    David Sanford: He did. He appeared virtually. He was given one business day’s notice. He lives in California. The hearing was held, of course, in Maryland, and he was told on a Friday that the hearing would take place on a Monday, and he asked for a one-week extension so that he could make plans to attend, and that motion for an extension was denied by the court. So he did appear, but the court ordered him to appear.

    He was at work at the time, he had 30 minutes to hustle home and appear via Zoom. But most importantly, he wasn’t able to meaningfully participate in the process, because when the hearing started, the judge simply asked, “What do you have to say?” And he had nothing really to say, other than he was shocked to be there, because nothing had been presented in court. There was no evidence ever presented in open court. The public doesn’t know what, if any, evidence exists. We certainly don’t know what, if any, evidence exists that would suggest that Adnan Syed’s conviction should be overturned.

    John Domen: OK, so help us out here. We are obviously not lawyers. We are told, though, that there is a new hearing that’s been scheduled or been ordered by the high court. Is it possible, is it likely even, that hearing will just sort of see the same thing happen all over again and the conviction will be tossed? Or what could happen there?

    David Sanford: Well, we don’t know. So right now, the court has ordered the lower court to take this up. It’s going to be before a different judge, and that judge is going to hold a hearing. It’s going to schedule a hearing, ideally some time in the fall/winter of this year. At that hearing, the prosecutor and the defense will come together and be able to present any evidence that it has to suggest that Adnan Syed should remain a free man and that his conviction should effectively be overturned.

    We don’t believe that evidence exists. We haven’t seen any evidence. We haven’t heard of any evidence. So now, the prosecution and the defense, they will have the burden to produce that evidence, and once they do, we’ll be able to comment on it. And if it shows that Adnan Syed really was unfairly, unjustifiably convicted, we’ll be the first to say that and to argue that Adnan Syed should remain a free man.

    Anne Kramer: David, you made a point to say that this ruling is on the side and will help victims’ families in the future. How will that work? And why do you think that?

    David Sanford: Well, because victims have a right under the Maryland Constitution to be treated with dignity, to be treated with respect and sensitivity, and those things mean something. They’re not empty platitudes. They mean something under the law. And what the Supreme Court has laid out in its 90-page opinion, there’s also a healthy dissent. But in the 90-page majority decision, it lays out what it means to be treated with respect in Maryland, and it’s a great day for victims and victims’ rights.

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    Thomas Robertson

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  • Court upholds a Nebraska woman’s murder conviction, life sentence in dismemberment killing

    Court upholds a Nebraska woman’s murder conviction, life sentence in dismemberment killing

    OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska Supreme Court has upheld the murder conviction and life sentence of a woman in the 2017 death and dismemberment of a Nebraska hardware store clerk.

    Bailey Boswell, 30, was convicted in 2020 of first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder and improper disposal of human remains in the death of 24-year-old Sydney Loofe. Boswell’s co-defendant and boyfriend at the time of the killing, 58-year-old Aubrey Trail, was convicted of the same charges in 2019 and sentenced to death in 2021.

    Prosecutors said Boswell and Trail had been planning to kill someone before Boswell met Loofe on the dating app Tinder. Boswell made plans for a date with Loofe, a cashier at a Menards store in Lincoln, to lure her to the apartment where she was strangled.

    The FBI and other law enforcement spent three weeks searching for Loofe before her dismembered remains were found in December 2017. Loofe’s body was found cut into 14 pieces and left in garbage bags in ditches along rural roads in southeastern Nebraska.

    In her appeal, Boswell challenged the admission of evidence by prosecutors in her trial, including photographs of Loofe’s dismembered body, arguing the gruesome photos served only to turn the jury against her. Boswell also objected to the the testimony of several women who said Trail and Boswell had talked of occult fantasies and had expressed a desire to sexually torture and kill women.

    Boswell’s defense attorney argued at her trial that she was forced by Trail to go along with the killing and dismemberment of Loofe.

    Justice Stephanie Stacy wrote for the high court’s unanimous ruling Friday that “there is no merit to any of Boswell’s assigned errors regarding the trial court’s evidentiary rulings.”

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