Ex-NFL star Hernandez's brain to be
returned to family: state
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[April 21, 2017]
By Scott Malone
BOSTON (Reuters) - Massachusetts officials
on Thursday were preparing to release the brain of New England Patriots
player Aaron Hernandez to his family for scientific study the day after
he was found hanged in his prison cell, a death investigators formally
ruled a suicide.
It remains unclear why the 27-year-old former National Football League
player hanged himself early on Wednesday in the cell where he was
serving a life sentence for the 2013 murder of an acquaintance. He did
so less than a week after he was cleared of a separate double-murder
charge.
The district attorney investigating the death said Hernandez had been
alone in his cell for seven hours by the time guards found his body at 3
a.m. (0700 GMT) on Wednesday, and noted that three handwritten notes
were found near a Bible in his room.
Hernandez's family wants to donate his brain to Boston University's CTE
center, his attorney Jose Baez said. The center studies chronic
traumatic encephalopathy, a condition linked to the sort of repeated
head hits common in football that can lead to aggression and dementia.
Baez earlier on Thursday accused the state of reneging on a deal to hand
Hernandez's brain over along with his body.
"The family should be able to have the dignity of a proper service in
the proper possession of Aaron's remains," Baez told reporters. Baez is
conducting his own investigation into the death and said he was not yet
satisfied that it was clearly a suicide.
Hernandez had a $41 million NFL contract when he was arrested at his
home in June 2013 and charged with murder. Prosecution witnesses at his
two trials painted a picture of a troubled man with a history of drug
use and paranoid tendencies.
The District Attorney for Worcester County, the site of the prison where
Hernandez died, on Thursday said Hernandez's official cause of death was
asphyxia by hanging.
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Former NFL player Aaron Hernandez and defense attorney Charles
Rankin wait in the courtroom during the jury deliberation in his
murder trial at the Bristol County Superior Court in Fall River,
Massachusetts, April 10, 2015. REUTERS/CJ Gunther/Pool/File Photo
"There were no signs of a struggle, and investigators determined
that Mr. Hernandez was alone at the time of the hanging," Joseph
Early said.
Baez declined to answer questions on Hernandez's mental state prior
to his suicide and dismissed as "ridiculous" local media reports
citing unnamed law enforcement sources that Hernandez was found with
a reference to a Bible verse written on his forehead.
Hernandez was heavily tattooed and during his most recent trial
jurors saw photos of two designs that depicted guns and one that
read "God forgives" when viewed with a mirror.
(Reporting by Scott Malone; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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