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Aaron Hernandez no longer a murderer

Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:39 am
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
64887 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:39 am
A judge has overturned the verdict and tossed out the charges. Just breaking on Twitter/CNN/Etc.

Posted by TechDawg2007
Bawville
Member since Nov 2007
32249 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:41 am to
Here's the article you lazy arse




quote:

Aaron Hernandez was granted an abatement on his 2015 conviction for the murder of Odin Lloyd, meaning the former New England Patriot is considered not guilty in the eyes of the court.

Bristol County (Mass.) Judge Susan Garsh, who preceded over the original trial, ruled in the favor of Hernandez’s estate, agreeing that an ancient Massachusetts law should be applied here. It states that is a defendant dies while a conviction is still in the process of appeal then the verdict is vacated. Hernandez, 27, committed suicide late last month while serving a sentence of life without the possibility of parole.

“Abatement is the law in this Commonwealth and this court is required to follow that precedent,” Garsh said citing case law. “… the Court has no other choice.”

The Commonwealth is expected to appeal the decision, which will almost certainly wind up in the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. No matter which way Garsh ruled, this was almost assuredly going to be step one in a long legal process.

Hernandez’s attorney, John Thompson, argued in briefs and during a 40-minute hearing Tuesday morning that neither the cause of death nor any assumed motives applied to the law. He noted there was no precedent in any other ruling on the issue that called for abatement not to be granted.

“[The original Lloyd ruling] is not a final conviction,” Thompson said. “And that’s what matters.”

Prosecutor Patrick Bomberg argued otherwise, saying that Hernandez chose to die, thus making a conscious decision to forfeit his appeal process as a way to be cleared, which wasn’t the intent of the law.

“The defendant should not be able to accomplish in death what he could not accomplish in life,” Bomberg argued.

He also noted that Hernandez, according to a state police report, mentioned to an unnamed fellow inmate that he was aware of the abatement law and in a suicide note mentioned to his fiancée, Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez, that “YOURE RICH.”

At stake, is not just Hernandez’s record, but potential payouts from the Patriots who could, perhaps, no longer be able to withheld money owed due to a conviction for murder.

“We are arguing there is a motive to do it,” Bomberg said, noting the financial benefits.

Garsh dismissed that point.

“This court can not know why Hernandez ended his life,” Garsh said. She cited other possible motives including Hernandez’s increased spirituality and writings that suggested he was following what he believed was God’s plan, as well as comments that he was seeking redemption on religious grounds. She also noted the fact other inmates heard via a Boston radio show that Hernandez might be bi-sexual.

If it gets that far, however, the family of Odin Lloyd still has a wrongful death civil suit pending. They may be able to gain access to any or all money the Hernandez’s estate received, if it receives any (the Patriots are expected to fight this also if it gets to that). Then there are the families of Daniel de Abreu and Safiro Furtado. Hernandez was acquitted of their 2012 murders in a Boston drive by shooting, however a civil suit would require a lower standard of proof. There are other creditors also lined up against the Hernandez estate, which is currently valued at $0.00.

Lloyd’s mother and sister led a large group at the hearing of supporters for Lloyd, a former semi-pro football player and landscaper in Boston. That included Shaneah Jenkins, his then girlfriend and the sister of Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez, who was not present.

The Lloyd supporters wept at the ruling. Uslala Ward, Lloyd’s mother, left court quickly.

After a lengthy trial, a Bristol County jury ruled just over two years ago that Hernandez shot Lloyd six times in an undeveloped patch of an industrial park less than a mile from Hernandez’s North Attleborough home.

A brilliant tight end on the football field, Hernandez, originally from Bristol, Conn. won a national title at the University of Florida and played three seasons with the Patriots, appearing in one Super Bowl where he caught a touchdown pass.

He is survived by a four-year-old daughter.
Posted by ShaneTheLegLechler
Member since Dec 2011
60093 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:41 am to
Pretty sure this is law in MA where if you haven exhausted the appeals process or something and you die a judge can overturn it. But of course the way the media is breaking it makes him seem innocent
Posted by mizzoubuckeyeiowa
Member since Nov 2015
35395 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:41 am to
Yeah...who really cares?

Conviction serves one purpose - to punish.

Dead people can't be punished.
Posted by Dire Wolf
bawcomville
Member since Sep 2008
36564 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:41 am to
Posted by SwaggerCopter
H TINE HOL IT DINE
Member since Dec 2012
27226 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:41 am to
If true, this is shady as hell. That judge should be thrown in prison because he got PAID.

ETA: This is the same story as weeks ago. Disregard.
This post was edited on 5/9/17 at 11:38 am
Posted by bbap
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Feb 2006
96003 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:42 am to
So basically he killed himself so the Patriots would have to pay his wife?
Posted by boXerrumble
Member since Sep 2011
52279 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:42 am to
...
Posted by RollTide1987
Augusta, GA
Member since Nov 2009
64887 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:42 am to
quote:

Here's the article you lazy arse



You're damn right I'm lazy. I'm on vacation.
Posted by bbap
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Feb 2006
96003 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:43 am to
quote:

If true, this is shady as hell. That judge should be thrown in prison because he got PAID.



I'm no lawyer but apparently it's a law in MA. I don't know if the judge has discretion or what but maybe he had no choice.

Again, don't really know.
Posted by Jester
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2006
34220 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:44 am to
quote:

Aaron Hernandez no longer a murderer


That's not at all what the story says or the judge's action does.
Posted by rt3
now in the piney woods of Pineville
Member since Apr 2011
140905 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:44 am to
quote:

If true, this is shady as hell. That judge should be thrown in prison because he got PAID.

no... just binding legal precedent in Mass.

they have a law stating that if someone dies before all appeals are exhausted then the conviction is thrown out
Posted by ShaneTheLegLechler
Member since Dec 2011
60093 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:44 am to
quote:

Yeah...who really cares?

Conviction serves one purpose - to punish.

Dead people can't be punished.


It definitely matters for the civil case, which is why Hernandez killed himself in the first place
Posted by TechDawg2007
Bawville
Member since Nov 2007
32249 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:44 am to
quote:

You're damn right I'm lazy. I'm on vacation.
Guess the ice cream machine really won't be working at Mcdonald's when I get off work
Posted by jefforize
Member since Feb 2008
44072 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:44 am to
Correct
Posted by Jester
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2006
34220 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:45 am to
quote:

So basically he killed himself so the Patriots would have to pay his wife?


I'm sure the Patriots will find a legal way not to.
Posted by rt3
now in the piney woods of Pineville
Member since Apr 2011
140905 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:45 am to
quote:

the judge's action does.

the judge's action makes him an innocent man in the eyes of the law

his conviction is now expunged from his record
Posted by Jester
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2006
34220 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:45 am to
quote:

It definitely matters for the civil case


It really doesn't, though.
Posted by Jester
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2006
34220 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:46 am to
quote:

innocent man in the eyes of the law


1. It makes him a "not guilty" man in the eyes of the law.

2. It doesn't change him being a murderer in the eyes of reality.
Posted by Byron Bojangles III
Member since Nov 2012
51614 posts
Posted on 5/9/17 at 10:48 am to
quote:

Yeah...who really cares?
his daughter and fiance who know might have access to 6 million dollars
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