NFL
star Hernandez's family sues league over 'severe' CTE
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[September 22, 2017]
By Scott Malone
BOSTON (Reuters) - Former New England
Patriots player Aaron Hernandez, who killed himself in prison in
April, had a "severe case" of the brain disease chronic traumatic
encephalopathy, a lawyer said on Thursday as he sued the team and
NFL on behalf of the athlete's young daughter.
Hernandez was a rising star in the National Football League when he
was arrested in 2013 and charged with murdering an acquaintance. He
was convicted of that killing but was acquitted earlier this year of
gunning down two men outside a Boston nightclub in 2012. Days later,
he hanged himself in a Massachusetts prison.
His death so soon after a legal win stunned fans and his family, who
asked that the brain of the 27-year-old former athlete be tested for
CTE, which is linked to the sort of repeated head traumas common in
football and can lead to aggression and dementia.
Researchers at Boston University, the leading center studying CTE,
found pronounced signs the disease in Hernandez's brain.
"It was the most severe case they had ever seen," said attorney Jose
Baez, who successfully defended Hernandez in the double-murder case
this year. "It was an advanced stage."
Baez filed a lawsuit in Boston federal court against the NFL and
Patriots on behalf of Hernandez's 4-year-old daughter, Avielle,
citing the CTE finding and seeking unspecified financial damages for
the loss of her father.
NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said the league had not yet seen the
lawsuit and could not comment. A spokesman for the Patriots did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
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Former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez glanced towards
the media during his murder trial at Bristol County Superior Court
in Fall River, Massachusetts February 3, 2015. REUTERS/Aram
Boghosian/The Boston Globe/Pool
Boston University's CTE center on Thursday confirmed that its
researchers found that Hernandez's brain showed signs of stage 3 of
the disease, with stage 4 being the most severe form.
Research released by the BU CTE center this summer found signs of
CTE in 99 percent of former NFL players studied.
The disease can be diagnosed only by taking brain tissue from a dead
subject and has been found in athletes including Hall of Fame
linebacker Junior Seau and Pro Bowl safety Dave Duerson, both of
whom committed suicide.
Hernandez had a $41 million NFL contract when he was arrested at his
home in June 2013 and charged with murder. He was convicted of that
killing in 2015.
A judge this year vacated that conviction, because Hernandez had not
exhausted all his avenues of appeal by the time he died, a move
allowed by a quirk in Massachusetts law. Prosecutors are appealing.
(Reporting by Scott Malone; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Matthew
Lewis)
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