Crime & Safety

25 Years Prison For Man Who Murdered His Child's Mother In East Haven

Jonnathan X. Jara-Aucapina, 30, strangled Lizzbeth Aleman-Popoca to death, bought a shovel and buried her body behind a restaurant dumpster.

In a garage-turned-chapel, the Aleman family grieved the loss of Lizzbeth Aleman-Popoca days after she was brutally murdered. .
In a garage-turned-chapel, the Aleman family grieved the loss of Lizzbeth Aleman-Popoca days after she was brutally murdered. . (Ellyn Santiago/Patch)

NEW HAVEN, CT —More than three years after his arrest by East Haven police on the charge of murder, and two months after be pleaded guilty, Jonnathan X. Jara-Aucapina, 30, was sentenced in New Haven Superior Court to 25 years in prison for the strangulation death of Lizzbeth Aleman-Popoca, his then-girlfriend and the mother of his child.

The then-couple and their young daughter lived in East Haven.

Back in February, outside the courtroom where his guilty plea was made, Aleman-Popoca's family gathered, including sister Yaneth and father Albino Aleman, and thanked investigators and advocates.

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East Haven Police Department investigators told Patch at the time that while, "As much as the outcome is not what they hoped for — they wanted their daughter back — at least they have some closure."

The murder of Lizzbeth

Aleman-Popoca, who had been missing for weeks from her East Haven home since July 2020, was found buried in a shallow grave dug behind the Branford restaurant where Jara-Aucapina worked.

Find out what's happening in East Havenfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

After months of investigation, Jara-Aucapina, then-27, was in December 2020 charged with murder and has been held on a $2 million bond since.

Once the missing mother's body was found by investigators, it would take months before the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in October ruled her death "homicidal asphyxia:" she was strangled to death.

The day of his arrest, Aleman-Popoca's father Albino Aleman, said his daughter's killing "destroyed my family."

In Spanish, he said that he and his family have been seeking "truth and justice" and thanked East Haven police for their months-long efforts to see Jara-Aucapina arrested.


The young mother had been missing for days before Jara-Aucapina reported her disappearance to police. She was last seen June 30, 2020, but was not reported missing until July 3. In July, police said that Jara-Aucapina claimed he was phoned by his daughter the morning of July 1 to say she'd awoken and her mother was not there, but said her "personal belongs" were. Two days later, he told police she was missing. The couple were not legally married, but he is the father to her daughter.

Aleman-Popoca's sister Yaneth told Patch that her sister, "Would never leave her baby. She would never leave her." The day after her body was found, more dumped than buried, in a very shallow 'grave' behind a cluster of large garbage bins and a dumpster, family and friends gathered in her father's New Haven home. In his garage-turned-chapel, with an altar adorned with flowers and photographs of the slain young mom, dozens gathered to pray.

At the time, Yaneth told Patch then that, all the family wanted was for there to be justice for their daughter and sister.

Yaneth said her sister was planning to separate from her longtime boyfriend and had been looking at an apartment in New Haven in the days before she went missing. the family said Jara-Aucapina "told us many lies."

In a statement emailed to Patch, East Haven police said Jara-Aucapina "concocted a story that Lizzbeth had run off, when he knew that she was already dead. He then used this story to lie to her family, her loved ones, and then eventually law enforcement when her family forced him to report her missing." And that after the initial missing person’s report, Jara-Aucapina "continued to lie to investigators, and also tried to conceal where he had buried her."

He bought a shovel, dug her grace and buried her behind a Branford restaurant

The voluminous charging documents lay out the disturbing case against Jara-Aucapina. Read that story here. Police said that after strangling her to death, he then went to work and, later on, hid the body in the trunk of her car, bought a shovel and hoe at a Home Depot and buried her body behind the restaurant dumpster. Those details are contained in an East Haven Police Department arrest warrant obtained by Patch through the Freedom of Information Act.

The arrest warrant suggests that Jara-Aucapina struck and then strangled to death his partner of a decade in the nighttime hours between June 30 and July 1, while their child slept in the East Haven apartment the couple shared. Investigators dug up her body two weeks later.

Her mission was to give her daughter everything she didn't have

“Lizzbeth's life wasn't easy,” her family said. “At 7 she had to take care of her 4-year-old sister. She became a mother to her. Her sister was all he had. She came to America at the age of 15 and started working immediately. Her life wasn't easy at first. At 19, she gave birth to her daughter Astrid. Her life took a different turn, and she saw the light at the end of the tunnel. Her daughter became her everything. She knew all her hard work had a meaning. Her mission was to give her daughter everything she didn't have.”

Read her obituary here

“She loved to draw and was pretty good at it. Weeks before her death, she began drawing again after a long time. She wanted to make designs for phones, cars, shirts and other accessories. She was motivated and ready to start a new chapter in life with her little daughter.”

Ellyn Santiago/Patch

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