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In final hours, Hernandez thought of family, not football

- THE AssoCIAtED prEss

BostoN

Family, not football, dominated Aaron Hernandez’s final hours as a lifer in prison.

As the hour of his death approached, the former NFL star chatted on the phone with his longtime fiancee, Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez. Authoritie­s say the pair stayed on the phone until the 8 p.m. lockdown at the maximum-security prison where he was serving a life sentence for murder.

Alone in his cell, the ex-New England Patriots tight end scribbled three notes. He laid them carefully next to a Bible.

Then he turned his bedsheet into a noose and hanged himself.

Those cryptic details emerged Thursday as authoritie­s ruled Hernandez’s death a suicide and turned his body over to a funeral home so his family could lay him to rest.

Investigat­ors wouldn’t say what Hernandez’s handwritte­n notes said. But they said they were satisfied he died at his own hand, and they said his brain would be donated to sports concussion researcher­s, ending a brief public dispute over its custody. More details emerged Thursdsay as authoritie­s ruled former NFL star Aaron Hernandez’s death a suicide.

Authoritie­s said the medical examiner had ruled Hernandez’s cause of death was asphyxia by hanging and investigat­ors had found the notes and Bible in Hernandez’s cell at the Souza-Baranowski Correction­al Center in Shirley.

Authoritie­s previously said Hernandez had not left a suicide note and he hadn’t been on suicide watch.

“There were no signs of a struggle, and investigat­ors determined that Mr. Hernandez was alone at the time of the

hanging,” the Worcester County district attorney’s office said in a statement.

Hernandez had been locked into his cell at about 8 p.m. on Wednesday and no one entered the cell until a guard saw him just after 3 a.m. and forced his way in because cardboard had been jammed into the door track to impede entry, authoritie­s said. Hernandez was found hanging from a bedsheet and was rushed to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead an hour later.

Earlier Thursday, Hernandez’s lawyer complained that state officials had turned over the 27-year-old’s body but not his brain.

Attorney Jose Baez said the family had arranged for researcher­s at Boston University’s Chronic Traumatic Encephalop­athy Center to take custody of the brain. The centre studies a progressiv­e degenerati­ve brain disease found in some athletes who have experience­d repetitive brain trauma.

Hernandez’s body is at a Boston-area funeral home, but services for the Bristol, Conn., native likely will be held elsewhere.

Baez said he retained Dr. Michael Baden, a former chief medical examiner for New York City, to perform an independen­t autopsy.

Baden, who didn’t immediatel­y comment, has performed autopsies in several high-profile cases, including the death of Michael Brown, a black teenager shot and killed by a white police officer in Ferguson, Mo., in 2014.

Baez declined to say whether he or the family believed brain damage from Hernandez’s playing days led him to kill himself.

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