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Saturday, April 27, 2024

Lawyers in Pedro Bravo case argue about schedule, 103 witnesses

Pedro Bravo’s murder trial likely won’t happen until next year.

Bravo, who is accused of kidnapping and killing UF student Christian Aguilar, appeared at a pretrial conference Friday at the Alachua County Courthouse as lawyers argued about a schedule for evidence discovery and the depositions of 103 witnesses.

Judge Denise Ferrero, who recently took over the case from Peter Sieg, set a deposition cutoff date of Jan. 14.

State Attorney Brian Kramer said witnesses live across the state — in Tampa, Orlando and Miami, where the Aguilar family drove from to attend Friday’s conference — so travel must be considered.

“We have a genuine desire to have this case brought to trial in a reasonable time period,” Kramer said.

Bravo’s defense lawyer, Michael Ruppert, said he’s set some deposition dates for mid-September.

“I understand the family wants this to come to closure,” Ruppert said.

Kramer also mentioned he was waiting to receive test results on two pieces of evidence: the duct tape used to bind Aguilar and a computer seized from Bravo’s apartment.

Contact Julia Glum at jglum@alligator.org.

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