Mark Diaz Bravo (Los Angeles County, California)

Factual background. On February 20, 1990, a patient at the psychiatric hospital where Bravo worked claimed she had been raped in an alcove earlier that afternoon. During the course of police interviews, she named several different people as her assailant. One of those she named was Bravo. She later stated she was sure Bravo was the attacker.

A Los Angeles County jury found Mark Diaz Bravo guilty of rape in 1990. He was sentenced by the court to a prison term of 8 years.

Prosecutor’s evidence at trial. The prosecution based its case on several points:

  • The victim named Bravo as the assailant and made an in-court identification.
  • Bravo had misrepresented himself in the past on applications and on his business card.
  • Blood tests done on a blanket near the crime scene showed a blood type consistent with Bravo’s blood type, which is found in only 3 percent of the population.
  • Bravo’s alibi defense was not aggressively pursued.

Postconviction challenges. Bravo’s appeal to the intermediate court of appeals was denied. Before his appeal was decided in 1992, he filed a postconviction motion in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. In 1993 a superior court judge granted Bravo’s motion to release a blanket, a sheet, and a pair of panties to the defense for DNA testing.

DNA results. Prosecutors received a report from Cellmark Diagnostics on December 24, 1993, stating that none of the tested semen had DNA that matched Bravo’s.

Conclusion. On January 4, 1994, Bravo’s lawyer filed a writ of habeas corpus. A Los Angeles County Superior Court judge ordered Bravo to be released on January 6, 1994. The judge stated that Bravo had not received a fair trial, that the victim had recanted her testimony, that Bravo’s alibi was unimpeachable, and that the DNA tests were irrefutable. On January 7, 1994, Bravo was released from prison after serving 3 years of his sentence.

This case profile is excerpted from Convicted by Juries, Exonerated by Science: Case Studies in the Use of DNA Evidence to Establish Innocence After Trial, a 1996 research report by the U.S. Department of Justice.