Hernandez death ruled suicide but questions remain
Aaron Hernandez’s death in prison has been ruled a suicide and the former NFL star’s brain is being donated to sports concussion researchers, according to Massachusetts authorities.
The declaration by prosecutors, state police and public health officials came after a tumultuous day in which Hernandez’s lawyer suggested the state was mishandling the investigation and illegally withholding his brain after releasing the rest of the body to a funeral home.
Authorities said investigators had found three handwritten notes next to a 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 Hernandez was alone at the time . . .” the statement read.
Hernandez had been locked into his cell at 8pm and no one entered the cell until a guard saw him just after 3am and forced his way in because cardboard had been jammed into the door track to impede entry, authorities said. Hernandez was rushed to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead about an hour later.
Earlier yesterday, 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 Centre 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 i s at a Boston- area funeral home, but services will likely be held elsewhere for the Connecticut native.
Baez says he has retained Dr Michael Baden, a former chief medical examiner for New York City, to perform an independent autopsy.
Baden has performed autopsies in several high- profile cases, including the death of Michael Brown, a black teen who was shot and killed by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri in 2014.
Baez declined to say whether he or 0800 543 354 ( available 0508 828 865 ( 0508 TAUTOKO) ( available 24/ 7) 0800 376 633 0800 543 754 ( available 0800 942 8787 ( 1pm to ( available 24/ 7)
0800 726 666 If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111. the family believed brain damage from Hernandez’s playing days led the 27- year- old former New England Patriots player to kill himself.
“We’re not suggesting anything,” he said.
“You go where the evidence takes you. We need to examine every aspect of this case.”
It’s generally best for researchers to get access to a brain within hours of death to determine the presence of Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy or other neurodegenerative diseases, said Dr Lee Goldstein, a CTE researcher at Boston University. Researchers also prefer to receive the entire brain as a small piece may not tell the whole story, he added.
Other questions surrounding Hernandez’s death remain unanswered.
Authorities have still not released the incident report, officers’ logs or video footage from the area around Hernandez’s cell.
Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker said he wasn’t drawing any conclusions until the full details of the investigation are revealed.
“Any time someone kills themselves in prison something clearly went wrong,” he said, adding that he had full confidence in prison officials.
Another unknown: why Hernandez would kill himself just days after he was cleared of two murder charges.
He had been serving a life sentence without parole for the 2013 slaying of a one- time friend. But during his trial in Boston for the killing of two men in Boston in 2012, he appeared upbeat, constantly backslapping his lawyers, letting out bellowing laughs and blowing kisses to his four- year- old daughter and other family members in the audience.
The former University of Florida standout died five days after a jury acquitted him in those two deaths, which prosecutors alleged were precipitated by one of the men accidentally spilling a drink on Hernandez at a Boston nightclub.
His death also came just hours before his former New England Patriots teammates visited the White House to celebrate their Super Bowl victory.