The sudden death of a 2-year-old placed in foster care has sparked a criminal investigation and fresh questions about how the county’s child welfare system handled his placement. Authorities say a teenage foster sibling is accused of horrific abuse and murder, and multiple social workers have been put on leave as officials probe the timeline. The case has exposed gaps in oversight and prompted calls for accountability from both investigators and family members.
The San Jose Police Department responded to a home on Otono Court on April 5 after someone reported a child who would not wake. Officers found the two-year-old unresponsive in his crib and emergency crews rushed him to a hospital where medical staff flagged suspicious injuries. Hospital records and early investigative notes quickly shifted the inquiry from a medical emergency to suspected violent abuse.
Detectives later arrested a 17-year-old who had been living in the same foster home, and prosecutors announced plans to pursue adult charges. Investigators say the teenager allegedly sexually assaulted and abused the child, who was identified in reports as Baby Jaxon. The case includes a string of severe charges, including sexual abuse, murder, child assault causing death, and assault with a hair tie.
Officials have also focused on the adults responsible for placing the child. Records show the toddler had been placed in the care of a 40-year-old foster caregiver in February, and that caregiver’s criminal past emerged during background checks and investigation. She was arrested and booked in connection with the case but was later released pending further review, raising more questions about vetting and monitoring.
Advocates and relatives say Jaxon had special needs and vulnerabilities that should have been considered before placement. Family members described him as born premature and possibly affected by fetal alcohol syndrome and autism, conditions that can increase a child’s dependency and need for stable, attentive care. Those concerns, family members say, were raised early on and deserve thorough scrutiny as investigators reconstruct the timeline.
Officials issued brief public statements as the investigation unfolded, and one short message summed up their intent clearly. ‘Jaxon will never have any way to tell his own story. My office will speak for him and all the lost children as we seek justice.’
By April 9 the child had died and the investigation was reclassified as a homicide, a development that intensified pressure on the county’s Department of Family and Children’s Services. Agency insiders acknowledge this is one of the worst outcomes social workers fear, and the department is now reviewing how the placement was authorized and monitored in the weeks before the death. A union representing county social workers confirmed that seven staff members were placed on administrative leave while investigators examine case files and decision notes.
Court filings and police reports indicate that prosecutors are considering charging the teen as an adult, a move that would allow for the most serious penalties if convictions are secured. That decision rests on the severity of the allegations and the evidence detectives have gathered from medical examinations, witness interviews, and the crime scene. Prosecutors say they will pursue all charges supported by the investigation.
The case has reopened debate over foster care safeguards, including how quickly children are moved, how foster households are screened, and how concerns from relatives are handled. Critics argue the system can rush placements when resources are stretched, and that oversight can falter between initial approval and routine follow-up visits. County officials say they are cooperating with investigators and reviewing policies to prevent similar tragedies.
Friends of the child reported that Jaxon came into custody after his mother died and his father was unable to provide care, a sequence that underlines how fragile placement decisions can be when families are in crisis. Community members and advocacy groups are calling for transparency about the case file, clearer rules for placements of children with complex needs, and stronger support for foster homes charged with caring for vulnerable kids. The criminal probe will aim to establish responsibility for the injuries and the failures that allowed them to happen.
District attorneys and law enforcement say they will present evidence and seek justice through the court process, while child welfare officials review internal procedures. “Jaxon will never have a chance at life,” a statement from District Attorney Jeff Rosen reads. “Jaxon will never have any way to tell his own story. My office will speak for him and all the lost children as we seek justice.”
