Friday, October 17, 2025 - The father of missing baby
Emmanuel Haro has pleaded guilty to the child's murd£r in Riverside
County.
Jake Haro pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the de@th of his
7-month-old son, Emmanuel, several weeks after the boy’s parents falsely
reported him missing in Riverside County.
Haro appeared in a Riverside courtroom Thursday, Oct. 16, where he changed
his plea from not guilty to guilty. He also pleaded guilty to filing a false
police report and assault of a child under 8, according to the Riverside County
district attorney’s office.
He pleaded guilty in court, separate from any plea agreement with the
district attorney’s office.
“In a plea to the court, a defendant enters guilty pleas to all charged
counts and the judge in the case determines the sentence a defendant will
serve,” the district attorney’s office said in a statement.
Haro faces 25 years to life in prison.
Rebecca Haro, the boy’s mother, has pleaded not guilty to
murd£r and remains in custody. She is scheduled to appear in court Nov. 3 for
her preliminary hearing. Haro is scheduled to be sentenced at the same
hearing.
Haro, 32, was arrested with Rebecca Haro, 41, in
connection with the boy’s de@th in August 2025. Initially, the couple
claimed he was kidnapped after an assailant attacked the mother.
According to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department,
Rebecca Haro said she was attacked in a Yucaipa parking lot Aug. 14 outside a
Big 5 store while changing Emmanuel’s diaper.
But investigators said there were inconsistencies in her
initial statement, and when they confronted her about those details, they said
she stopped cooperating
Authorities arrested the parents at their Cabazon home a
week after they reported their son missing.
In the first weeks of the investigation, search teams
scoured an isolated field in Moreno Valley. They were accompanied by Haro, who
wore a jail jumpsuit. Authorities did not find the boy, officials said. The
infant’s remains have not been located.
The San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department initially led
the investigation, but charges against the parents were filed in Riverside
County.
When asked for an update on the search for baby Emmanuel’s
remains, the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office said the San Bernardino County
Sheriff’s Department is leading the investigation. But a spokesperson for the
San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department referred all questions to the
Riverside County district attorney’s office.
The Uvalde Foundation for Kids, a nonprofit that offered a cash reward in the
early days of the search for Emmanuel, criticized the lack of updates from
authorities regarding the case and the search for Emmanuel’s remains.
They said Haro’s guilty plea is a “necessary step toward
accountability” but the case is also incomplete.
The foundation’s founder, Daniel Chapin, said in a
statement, “justice for Emmanuel is incomplete until his remains are
recovered.”
“Our fight now centers on recovering Emmanuel and enacting
‘Emmanuel’s Law’ to protect other children from falling through the cracks of a
broken system,” Chapin said.
As the search for Emmanuel was underway, focus shifted from
the mother to both parents after it came to light that Haro had a previous
conviction for child abuse.
In 2018, Haro and his then-wife were interviewed by Hemet
police after their baby was examined at a local hospital, according to a police
affidavit seeking an arrest warrant. The unidentified girl had a skull
fracture, several healing fractures to her ribs, a brain hemorrhage, swelling
in the neck and a healing tibia fracture in her leg.
A doctor who examined the child told police that the girl
had “intracranial hemorrhage, brain injury, cervical spine injury and retinal
hemorrhages” and other injuries, the affidavit said.
Haro told police that he accidentally dropped the baby into
a center divider in their kitchen sink while giving her a bath, but the doctor
said the injuries did not fit that narrative.
The couple blamed each other, according to the officer’s
affidavit. In 2023, Haro was convicted of felony willful child endangerment and
his then-wife was convicted of misdemeanor willful harm to a child, court
records show.
When Emmanuel’s parents reported him missing, Riverside
County authorities followed up and removed a 2-year-old child from their home.

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