Topic: Hernandez Gets Life Without Parole!!!!!!!
Lpdon's photo
Wed 04/15/15 09:46 AM
DEVELOPING: Aaron Hernandez, the former star tight end for the New England Patriots, was sentenced to life in prison without parole after being convicted Wednesday of first-degree murder in the death of his fiancee's sister's boyfriend, who prosecutors say may have known too much about two previous killings in which Hernandez is a suspect.

The hulking former Pro-Bowler, who commanded a salary of nearly $10 million per year and was one of the top young stars in the game as recently as three seasons ago, looked to his right and pursed his lips after the jury forewoman read the verdict. The conviction in the murder of Odin Lloyd, a 27-year-old landscaper and amateur weekend football player, carries a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Hernandez's mother, Terri, and his fiancee, Shayanna Jenkins, cried and gasped when they heard the verdict. Shayanna Jenkins wept on his mother's shoulder. Hernandez later mouthed to them: "Be strong. Be strong."

The former football pro was also found guilty on firearm and ammunition charges.

Hernandez's lawyer acknowledged during closing arguments that he was at the scene when Lloyd was killed. But he pinned the shooting on two of Hernandez's pals, saying his client was a 23-year-old kid who didn't know what to do.


Prosecutors said Hernandez planned the killing and then helped cover it up.

VIDEO: Judge Napolitano breaks down Hernandez guilty verdict

Lloyd was shot six times in the middle of the night on June 17, 2013, in a deserted industrial park near Hernandez's home in North Attleborough. Prosecutors presented a wealth of evidence that Hernandez was with Lloyd at the time he was killed, including home security video from Hernandez's mansion, witness testimony and cellphone records that tracked Lloyd's movements.

Hernandez's lawyer, James Sultan, acknowledged for the first time during closing arguments that Hernandez was there when Lloyd was killed.

But the attorney pinned the shooting on two of Hernandez's friends, Ernest Wallace and Carlos Ortiz, saying his client was a "23-year-old kid" who witnessed a shocking crime and didn't know what to do. Wallace and Ortiz will stand trial later.

Prosecutors have suggested Lloyd may have been killed because he knew too much about Hernandez's alleged involvement in a deadly 2012 drive-by shooting in Boston. But they were not allowed to tell the jury that because the judge said it was speculation.

As a result, they never offered a motive beyond saying Hernandez appeared angry with Lloyd at a nightclub two nights before the killing.

Hernandez faces further legal trouble: He is awaiting trial on murder charges in the drive-by shooting. He is accused of gunning down two men over a spilled drink at a nightclub.

The former tight end grew up in Connecticut, where he starred for Bristol Central High School. Heavily recruited, he initially committed to play for the University of Connecticut, but later switched to the University of Florida, where he played from 2007 to 2009. With the Gators, he became a starter as a sophomore, and starred in the 2009 BCS National Championship Game in which Florida beat the Oklahoma Sooners, 24–14. The next season, Hernandez was named a first-team All-American.

Hernandez declared for the NFL draft after his junior year, and was selected by the New England Patriots in the fourth round. Days after he was selected, The Boston Globe reported that Hernandez had failed multiple drug tests while in college. As a pro, Hernandez became a rookie starter and scored six touchdowns in 14 games. He was named a Pro Bowl alternate in his second season, in 2011, and helped lead the Patriots to Super Bowl XLVI, which the team lost to the New York Giants 17-21.

After cutting Hernandez, the team immediately voided the remaining years on the contract and moved to recoup all of the signing bonus. Less than a year later, he was arrested for the murder of Lloyd and was soon cut by the Patriots, winners of this year’s Super Bowl.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/04/15/verdict-reached-in-aaron-hernandez-murder-trial/

I was hoping he would have gotten sentenced to death. This guy has been brutalizing, and shooting people and trying to be a gangster etc.

2OLD2MESSAROUND's photo
Wed 04/15/15 10:01 AM
Alas, our nation seems to be turning away from that choice for such heinous crimes;
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/13/jodi-arias-sentenced_n_7054582.html
Arias initially denied any involvement in killing Alexander, whose body was discovered June 10, 2008, in his Mesa, Arizona, home. Alexander, 30, had been shot in the head and stabbed nearly 30 times. His throat had been cut from ear to ear. When DNA proved she was lying, Arias changed her story, claiming there had been a home invasion by two unknown killers. It was not until years later that she admitted to killing Alexander.

and the standing argument has been that it's cost prohibitive to keep them on 'Death Row' due to the extreme cost vs leaving them on 'LIFE' when they don't get to keep getting any options for their appeal process! {{heavy sigh}} Our legal system has been so screwed & twisted towards the protection of the 'possible innocent' that they now get more RIGHTS THEN THEIR VICTIMS EVER DID!

Something really wrong in all this IMO and I agree with you; I really tired of the THUGS getting awarded MILLION DOLLAR Pro Contracts and then they become nothing more then HIGH DOLLAR CRIMINALS WITH LONGER CRIME SHEETS TO THEIR NAMES! explode

no photo
Wed 04/15/15 10:14 AM
All the major cable news networks covered the verdict announcement and setencing ALL morning. Why? I mean....I know why....but do viewers really care about this idiot's murder trial? Sad, if so. They shoulda done a two minute piece about him then never, ever mention the thug piece of crap again.

The guy had it made.....young, rich, and a promising NFL career. What a dumbazz. Oh well, the Mexican Mafia just gained a new member....good luck with that "contract" Aaron lol


2OLD2MESSAROUND's photo
Wed 04/15/15 03:40 PM
NFL Bad Guys: 15 Players Who Give the League a Bad Name
By Barbara Bruno , Contributor
Nov 7, 2011
***see the link for the full article***
I’m a fan of sports because, unlike many jobs where success is a function of which social group into which you are born, to be a star athlete you actually have to able to do something. And do it well. I respect that and I believe that it is the essence of why sports can provide valuable character lessons about how sometimes being really good at what you do matters.

So, yeah, I get angry with a bunch of over-paid, purposefully ignorant boys who can’t manage to control their testosterone enough to refrain from:

1) Abusing women and animals (15 percent of arrests are for domestic violence and I found multiple instances of animal neglect and abuse)

2) Starting fights with people much smaller than themselves (21 percent)

3) Drinking and driving (28 percent)

4) Carrying guns to social events (eight percent)

5) Either cheating with or dealing drugs (13 percent are criminal drug charges)

6) Variations and combinations of the above, almost always including “resisting arrest” (15 percent)

Sixty-seven percent either plead guilty or are convicted while 27 percent of charges are dropped or settled and six percent of those arrested are ultimately acquitted.
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/928449-nfl-bad-guys-15-players-who-give-the-league-a-bad-name


Granted this article was written back in 2011 and there have been several other 'BAD NFL' examples since that time {Hernandez just one of a few}...it's driven home the finite points about what has been lurking behind those MEGA BUCKS that we hear about but don't get to hear about the HUMAN SIGNING that contract until they start getting more negative media attention!
WHERE WAS THE SCOUTS/THE NFL BEFORE THE SIGNATURE ON THE DOTTED LINE?

Financial Woes? Seems that has been an issue for them as well:


April 13 2015 6:08 PM
How Many Pro Football Players Actually Go Broke?
Fewer Than You Might Think.
But exactly how many end up outright bankrupt? Look up that question, and you'll likely be led to a Sports Illustrated article from 2009 that offered something close to an estimate. "By the time they have been retired for two years, 78% of former NFL players have gone bankrupt or are under financial stress because of joblessness or divorce," Pablo Torre wrote for the magazine, citing "a host of sources," including "athletes, players' associations, agents and financial advisers." Today, however, a new working paper released by the National Bureau of Economic Research is challenging that number, at least somewhat.* Using data on all 2,016 players drafted between 1996 and 2003, it finds that after two years off the field, just 1.9 percent of former NFL pros have filed for bankruptcy. A dozen years into retirement, 15.7 percent have filed for bankruptcy.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/moneybox/2015/04/13/nfl_players_and_bankruptcy_fewer_football_players_go_bust_than_you_might.html



no photo
Wed 04/15/15 06:12 PM
There goes his retirement hopes.whoa