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VAN NUYS : Parolee Pleads Guilty to Raping Woman

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Despite the victim’s inability to identify him, a prison parolee pleaded guilty Wednesday to the rape of an 83-year-old woman after DNA tests linked him to the crime.

As a result of a plea bargain, Juan Molina, a 37-year-old Mexican national, will receive a 24-year prison term.

Molina admitted his crimes--forcible rape, robbery and having two previous felony convictions--as a Van Nuys Superior Court jury was set to hear opening statements in his trial.

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Even though Molina’s elderly victim could not identify him as the man who attacked her in her North Hollywood home on May 6, 1992, DNA evidence and fingerprints found on a beer bottle on the property led police to him.

Police found Molina’s three fingerprints on the bottle, contacted Molina and took a sample of his blood. The tests established that genetic material from Molina’s blood and that collected from the victim when she was treated at a hospital were shared by only one in 9.5 million people. Because of the complicated and time-consuming testing, Molina was not arrested until 10 months after the rape.

The use of DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is now generally accepted as evidence in courts. When scientists isolate a small amount of a person’s genetic makeup from skin, blood or other bodily fluids, they can compare it to genetic material from another source.

The DNA that is tested does not positively link a person to evidence from a crime scene, but it narrows the field of possible suspects.

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