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Aaron Hernandez Found Guilty of 1st Degree Murder

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Aaron Hernandez has told jail investigators that he has no gang ties.

 

The investigators have examined the tattoos on Hernandez and found nothing that would suggest gang affiliations. His alleged crime spree appears to have been a personal endeavor. Meanwhile, Hernandez remains segregated from the rest of the jail population for his own safety. "He's been very polite, very respectful," said Sherrif Thomas Hodgson. "He doesn't seem nervous, which is 
unusual for someone who's never been incarcerated before. He now has three hours out of his cell each day. That's an hour outside, by himself, an hour to shower and make phone calls, and another hour to see visitors."

 

Source: Boston Herald

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:nonono:

You shouldn't be allowed to talk to anyone on the outside while in jail. 1 hour outta your cell a day to shower and yard. It almost seems better in some peoples cases to go to jail. If you homeless, why not? :shrug: Free food, shelter and some even have tvs.

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Um...

 

A person "of interest to investigators" in the Odin Lloyd murder investigation died in a car accident Sunday.

 

Thaddeus Singleton III's death was ruled an accident, and it's "unclear" if he knew of investigators' interest in his connection to Hernandez. It's unknown how the death might affect the prosecution's case.

 

Source: Hartford Courant

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Aaron Hernandez calling shots from jail. Money talks. :yep:

 

In all seriousness, who knows. But my brain always has it's conspiracy theories. This world is fucked up like that.

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Aaron Hernandez was reportedly involved in a 2007 bar fight and burst a man's eardrum with a punch.

Hernandez was 17 years old and at a restaurant/bar in Gainesville, Fla. called The Swamp. He got into a "verbal altercation" with an employee named Michael Taphorn over the bill and a couple drinks and was escorted outside. Hernandez punched Taphorn in the side of the head, but for some reason was not arrested even though police recommended a felony battery charge. Tim Tebow tried to break up the melee. Meanwhile, other reports from TMZ are highlighting recent domestic disturbances from Hernandez. Even Bengals owner Mike Brown has come out and said he wouldn't have touched Hernandez in the 2010 draft.

Source: Wall Street Journal

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Court documents indicate that the search of a secret "flop house" leased by former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez has turned up what police say could be key evidence in the murder case against him.

 

Police say they learned about the apartment from Carlos Ortiz, a friend of Hernandez's whom prosecutors say was with the ex-player the night he allegedly arranged the shooting of Odin Lloyd.

 

They then searched the $1,200-a-month apartment in Franklin on June 26, according to search warrant records at Wrentham District Court. Among the findings were a white hooded sweatshirt and a cranberry-colored cap in a bedroom, the documents said.

 

Surveillance video showed Hernandez, 23, wearing a similar sweatshirt the night Lloyd was killed on June 17, the records say.

 

The search also turned up several boxes of ammunition, including .22-, .45- and 7.62-caliber ammunition.

 

http://espn.go.com/boston/nfl/story/_/id/9447468/cops-find-evidence-secret-aaron-hernandez-pad

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So Hernandez gang killed off the witness in a much better fashion then he did Lloyd. Dude was reckless that night or he may still be a free man.

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7.62? Interesting.

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Per Rotoworld.com:

 

Court documents indicate that fellow suspect Carlos Ortiz will testify against Aaron Hernandez in the Odin Lloyd murder case.

Ernest Wallace appears to be sticking with Hernandez, but it was Ortiz who led authorities to Hernandez's "flop house," where "key evidence" was reportedly found. Ortiz is alleged to have been with Hernandez at the time of Lloyd's murder, so his cooperation could be damning. Jul 5 - 10:55 AM

 

Source: Boston Herald

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Odin Lloyd was the pot dealer conceded by Aaron Hernandez's girlfriend.

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Aaron Hernandez admitted to firing fatal shots, documents say

 

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap1000000216990/article/aaron-hernandez-admitted-to-firing-fatal-shots-documents-say

 

A man linked to the murder case involving Aaron Hernandez cast the former New England Patriots tight end as the triggerman in a police interview, according to documents filed Tuesday morning in Florida.

 

The Broward County court records, obtained by CBS4 Miami and provided to NFL.com and NFL Network, also show a vehicle wanted in connection to a 2012 double killing in Boston had been rented in Hernandez's name.

 

The Associated Press first reported the contents of the documents.

 

Hernandez has been charged with murder in the June 17 killing of Boston semi-pro football player Odin Lloyd. The court records say Hernandez associate Carlos Ortiz told Massachusetts investigators on June 25 that another man, Ernest Wallace, said Hernandez shot Lloyd in an industrial park near Hernandez's home in North Attleborough.

 

The documents were filed in court by the Miramar, Fla., police department to justify a search of Wallace's mother's home in that city. Police executed that search July 1 and took 14 items, including clothing and two cell phones.

 

The records also show that police, while investigating Lloyd's killing, searched in Hernandez's hometown of Bristol, Conn., on June 26, and found a vehicle wanted in connection with a July 2012 double homicide near a Boston nightclub.

 

Hernandez has pleaded not guilty in Lloyd's killing. His legal team did not return email messages Tuesday. Wallace, who turned himself in to Miramar police June 28, faces an accessory to murder charge in the case and has pleaded not guilty.

 

Prosecutors say Hernandez, Wallace and Ortiz drove with Lloyd in a rented Nissan Altima to the industrial park where Lloyd was fatally shot.

 

Ortiz told police that Hernandez told Lloyd during the June 17 drive that Lloyd had been "chilling" with people Hernandez had problems with, the documents say. But Ortiz told police the two men shook hands and the problem seemed smoothed over. Ortiz said he fell asleep on the car ride, which happened after 2 a.m., but awoke when the vehicle stopped and Hernandez, Wallace and Lloyd exited to urinate.

 

Ortiz told police he then heard gunshots before Hernandez and Wallace got back into the car without Lloyd and sped away. Ortiz said he couldn't see who fired the shots because it was dark.

 

 

Back at Hernandez's home, Ortiz said, Wallace asked him to get a small gun out from under the driver's seat. Ortiz said he did and gave it to Hernandez once they were inside the home.

 

Ortiz said he then went to sleep. When he woke up in the afternoon, according to his account, the three men returned the Altima and rented a Chrysler 300 before returning to Hernandez's home. Ortiz and Wallace then went to an area apartment that Hernandez and other football players used. Wallace let Ortiz in before leaving for a long time, Ortiz said. The two then drove to Bristol, and Ortiz told police Wallace said Hernandez "admitted to shooting" Lloyd.

 

The gun used in the killing has not been found.

 

Hernandez, Wallace and Ortiz appear linked through Bristol. Wallace told Florida police he grew up with Hernandez's father. Ortiz's attorney, John Connors, said Tuesday his client, who's around the age of Hernandez's older brother, is from Bristol.

 

Ortiz was arraigned last month on a charge of illegally carrying a firearm on the day of the shooting, and a not guilty plea was entered on his behalf.

 

Still can't get over how fucking dumb this dude is. He could be catching balls from Tom Brady but he decided he wanted to be a gangsta. And that road usually ends up in jail or dead more often then not. Whatever point he wanted to get across, I wonder if he thinks it's worth it now. Dumbest rich criminal ever. A complete dumb ass.

Edited by dutchff7
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Aaron Hernandez admitted to firing fatal shots, documents say

 

 

 

Still can't get over how fucking dumb this dude is. He could be catching balls from Tom Brady but he decided he wanted to be a gangsta. And that road usually ends up in jail or dead more often then not. Whatever point he wanted to get across, I wonder if he thinks it's worth it now. Dumbest rich criminal ever. A complete dumb ass.

 

Makes you kind of mad, eh? Does me just a little. I'd give anything to play in the NFL. Fucking asshole

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Glad to see the Pouncey brothers have joined the movement. :troll:

 

BPKPBeDCIAMxJ5B.jpg

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Hernandez and the Pouncey brothers were great friends at Florida. No surprise there. Everyone is entitled to their opinions I suppose. I'm not sure that their respective teams will appreciate them flying Free Hernandez caps though.

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Posted by Mike Florio on July 25, 2013, 2:21 PM EDT

 

Every time it looks like it has gotten as bad as it can ever get for Aaron Hernandez, it finds a way to get a little worse.

 

With a grand jury in Bristol County, Massachusetts considering whether to indict Hernandez for the June 2013 murder of Odin Lloyd and a grand jury in Suffolk County, Massachusetts reportedly considering whether to indict Hernandez for the July 2012 murder of Safiro Furtado and Daniel Abreu, attorney Jack Furlong explained during Wednesday’s edition of Pro Football Talk on NBCSN that the feds could still get involved in this one — and that Hernandez ultimately could be facing the death penalty.

 

“If this was a murder of a witness or someone who knew something about the earlier murder, then this case becomes potentially a death penalty case and a federal proceeding,” Furlong explained regarding the killing of Odin Lloyd, who reportedly may have known something about Hernandez’s involvement in the double murder. ”Remember, Massachusetts does not have the death penalty. The United States government does. . . . This case . . . went across state lines repeatedly between Florida, Connecticut and Massachusetts. It could go federal in a heartbeat.”

 

Six years ago, the prosecution of Mike Vick went federal, but only after it became apparent that the prosecutor in Surry County, Virginia wasn’t moving as zealously as perhaps he should. Here, the state-level powers-that-be are pushing the issue appropriately, but there’s one specific arrow in the federal quiver that Massachusetts doesn’t have.

 

Source: ProFootballTalk

______________________

 

Posted by Mike Florio on July 25, 2013, 5:52 PM EDT

 

Prosecutors don’t have the gun that killed Odin Lloyd. But they think they have photos of it.

 

On Thursday, via multiple reports, documents that were released publicly include still frames from Hernandez’s video surveillance system, which prosecutors contend show Hernandez holding the murder weapon.

 

Per FOX 25 in Boston, the images were included in a 104-page affidavit that was “heavily redacted.” During Hernandez’s initial court appearance last month, prosecutors mentioned that surveillance video included images of Hernandez holding a gun.

 

The gun that killed Lloyd, a .45-caliber handgun, has not been found.

 

Source: ProFootballTalk

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^ Massachusetts doesn't have the death penalty.

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Read the article again ...

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0% chance he gets the death penalty, regardless of who prosecutes.

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0% chance he gets the death penalty, regardless of who prosecutes.

IDK. A celeb like this is something the feds dream of putting to death to send a message. I could see it happening, either way this dude is toast.

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IDK. A celeb like this is something the feds dream of putting to death to send a message. I could see it happening, either way this dude is toast.

 

Gotta side with blots on this one. No way he's getting the penalty especially in Ma.

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