Whole story is just a waste of lives and talent.
"Money over bitches, nigga stick to the script." - Jay-Z
They gonna love me for my ambition.
Quote: (04-19-2017 11:07 AM)YossariansRight Wrote:
Quote: (04-19-2017 11:02 AM)Captainstabbin Wrote:
He was young, but I bet they still try to blame this on concussion brain damage. There's probably millions of dollars in insurance money at stake - money that doesn't pay out for a straight suicide.
Finished listening to the dean of the MA School of Law on 98.5 FM SportsHub about two hours ago. He unequivocally said:
EVERY CRIMINAL CHARGE will be vacated AND Hernandez’s family will be entitled to BOTH his CONTRACT $$$$ AND his NFL PENSION.
Wow... Crime does pay.
And I call bullshit on the suicide. He was suicided.
Quote: (04-19-2017 01:22 PM)Hypno Wrote:
Quote: (04-19-2017 11:07 AM)YossariansRight Wrote:
Quote: (04-19-2017 11:02 AM)Captainstabbin Wrote:
He was young, but I bet they still try to blame this on concussion brain damage. There's probably millions of dollars in insurance money at stake - money that doesn't pay out for a straight suicide.
Finished listening to the dean of the MA School of Law on 98.5 FM SportsHub about two hours ago. He unequivocally said:
EVERY CRIMINAL CHARGE will be vacated AND Hernandez’s family will be entitled to BOTH his CONTRACT $$$$ AND his NFL PENSION.
Wow... Crime does pay.
And I call bullshit on the suicide. He was suicided.
That doesn't make any sense. in the NFL, if you are injured you don't get paid. you are going to pay this guy who was in jail, and give him a pension?
The pension for the years served in the NFL I can see, since that money is already stet aside. but not his contract.
And on what basis is his original conviction going to be vacated?
Quote: (04-19-2017 02:57 PM)YossariansRight Wrote:
Quote: (04-19-2017 01:22 PM)Hypno Wrote:
Quote: (04-19-2017 11:07 AM)YossariansRight Wrote:
Quote: (04-19-2017 11:02 AM)Captainstabbin Wrote:
He was young, but I bet they still try to blame this on concussion brain damage. There's probably millions of dollars in insurance money at stake - money that doesn't pay out for a straight suicide.
Finished listening to the dean of the MA School of Law on 98.5 FM SportsHub about two hours ago. He unequivocally said:
EVERY CRIMINAL CHARGE will be vacated AND Hernandez’s family will be entitled to BOTH his CONTRACT $$$$ AND his NFL PENSION.
Wow... Crime does pay.
And I call bullshit on the suicide. He was suicided.
That doesn't make any sense. in the NFL, if you are injured you don't get paid. you are going to pay this guy who was in jail, and give him a pension?
The pension for the years served in the NFL I can see, since that money is already stet aside. but not his contract.
And on what basis is his original conviction going to be vacated?
Pension:
http://www.csnne.com/video/coyne-patriot...fl-pension
Conviction vacation:
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/local_c...conviction
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/local_c...conviction
I thought the salary angle was brought up by the lawyer; must have been another caller.
Quote: (04-19-2017 11:43 AM)david.garrett84 Wrote:
I think guys like Bernie Madoff and Rod Blagojevich would have an easier time in prison, even with their diminutive sizes. Fellow inmates would probably have a lot more in common with them than a guy like Aaron.
Quote: (04-19-2017 05:43 PM)BallsDeep Wrote:
According to a couple Massachusetts law professors, Hernandez will now be entitled to keep his 12.5 million dollar signing bonus, which would go to his heirs.
Damn this guy couldn't get away from trying to be a real life Tony Soprano, and he finished it off by trying to be a real life Walter White. As morbid as this all is, there's a tinge of nobility there.
Quote:Quote:
Hernandez’s alleged longtime male lover, the high school friend, was interviewed extensively by authorities after Lloyd’s murder, and was forced to testify in front of a grand jury. Law enforcement officials also say Hernandez moved a large amount of money into three accounts shortly before his arrest for the Lloyd killing: one account was for his fiancée; a second was for his daughter; the third, where the most money was moved, was for that friend.
Quote: (04-19-2017 11:43 AM)david.garrett84 Wrote:
Great athletes don't necessarily make comfortable prisoners, especially when a horde of other inmates would want to cut someone like him down.
Quote:Quote:
Hernandez’s life was awful...his life was marked by violent fights, attempts by other inmates to extort and intimidate him and outbursts of frustration at the arbitrary strictness of inmate life. He was surrounded by danger, pressure and, at times, just pathetic ridiculousness.
ccording to jail and prison records, Hernandez struggled with everything from routine disciplinary checks, to getting along with other inmates, to frustrations about having so few people to talk with.
In Bristol County Jail, where he served about 22 months, Hernandez was charged with 21 disciplinary offenses stemming from 12 separate incidents, according to records. At the Souza-Baranowski prison, where he spent two years, there were 78 more disciplinary offenses and 12 major incidents, according to records.
There were at least four physical altercations, with Hernandez often challenged by other inmates. He was caught with a nearly 6-inch shiv at one point. At times he was treated for cuts, bruises and reddened fists after battles so intense guards couldn’t pull the men apart without using mace.
“Hernandez struck [name redacted] with a closed fist to the face and both men engage[d] in a physical altercation,” one Souza-Baranowski incident report detailed. “The combatants ignored several direct orders to cease their actions and chemical agent was utilized to separate the inmates.”
Another time, in Bristol County, he and an inmate were placed in individual cages in the “yard” for their designated hour outside their cell. An argument ensued and, unable to get at the other man, they proceeded to spit on each other through the fencing.
After fights, Hernandez could appear despondent, according to guards. While prison records labeled Hernandez a member of the “Bloods Street Gang,” many inmates told authorities that he mostly “kept to himself” and tried to engage in spiritual behavior. If he thought being a football star would endear him to others, it often worked the other way, with convicts challenging him.
His fame made him a target for everything....
He complained about body cavity, strip and cell searches. He often called the jail “corrupt.” He argued guards were unnecessarily intrusive in his life. “You’re overdoing your job,” he shouted at one, according to a report.
He was known, in fits of extreme frustration, to kick and pound his door and shout for assistance.
“His aggressive tone … has become an excessive habit when he does not receive what he wants, when he wants it,” one Bristol County guard wrote in a report. “He is constantly kicking his cell door and screaming at the top of his lungs utilizing profanity at times when he wants something, regardless of how miniscule it is. It is not uncommon for Hernandez to kick his cell door constantly until an officer approaches his cell merely to ask the officer for the current time...."
There was no respect there, not from other inmates, not from guards, not from the system. Hard time didn’t appear to harden him. His requests for more food, a cellmate he liked or anything else was always summarily dismissed. He was a nobody.