Boston Herald

Aaron Hernandez daughter loses out on concussion $$

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PHILADELPH­IA — The 6-year-old daughter of the late NFL player Aaron Hernandez missed a 2014 deadline to opt out of the league’s concussion settlement and can’t separately pursue a $20 million suit over his diagnosis of a degenerati­ve brain disease, a judge ruled.

Yet Hernandez’s death in 2017 came too late for his family to seek up to $4 million in compensati­on for suicides related to chronic traumatic encephalop­athy under the class action settlement.

Hernandez spent three years with the New England Patriots before his 2013 arrest on the first of three homicide charges. The Patriots terminated his $40 million contract, and he never returned to the NFL.

U.S. District Judge Anita Brody in Philadelph­ia — where lawsuits were consolidat­ed alleging the NFL hid what it knew about the risks of concussion injuries — ruled Thursday that he was effectivel­y retired and therefore, along with his family, bound by the class action settlement for NFL retirees.

Under terms of the concussion settlement, the judge said, “The crux of the issue is whether Hernandez was ‘seeking active employment’ as an NFL football player as of July 7, 2014. He was not. On this date, Hernandez had been imprisoned — without bail — for nearly a year.”

Family lawyer Brad Sohn argued that Hernandez had not retired but hoped to be exonerated and return to the league. His daughter, Sohn said, should therefore be able to pursue her “loss of consortium” lawsuit in her home state of Massachuse­tts.

Hernandez was convicted in the first homicide case in 2015 but acquitted of an unrelated double homicide in April 2017. He took his life days later in prison. His conviction was later overturned because he died before exhausting his appeals.

Doctors later found the 27-year-old Hernandez had advanced CTE on a level not previously seen in someone that young.

The daughter involved in the lawsuit is the child of Hernandez’s fiancee, Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez.

“A.H., a child, committed no crime nor asked to be born into such tragic circumstan­ces,” Sohn wrote.

 ?? POOL FILE ?? ‘LOSS OF CONSORTIUM’: Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez sits in court with her daughter with Hernandez during jury deliberati­ons in Hernandez’s doublemurd­er trial on April 12, 2017, a few days before the former Patriots player hanged himself in prison.
POOL FILE ‘LOSS OF CONSORTIUM’: Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez sits in court with her daughter with Hernandez during jury deliberati­ons in Hernandez’s doublemurd­er trial on April 12, 2017, a few days before the former Patriots player hanged himself in prison.

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