highland145
Lifer
- Oct 12, 2009
- 43,973
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Just heard breaking news on the radio on the way to work that he was found hung in his cell a bit after 3am.
EDIT:
https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2...self-prison/Hkp9wdGcZImoMBomJLMNVJ/story.html
One step closer to being a Cowboy! We are counting on him for when Witten finally leaves us!
I guess he was only a tough guy with a gun in his hand. He so soft, a lemon meringue pie would have lasted longer in prison than him.Just heard breaking news on the radio on the way to work that he was found hung in his cell a bit after 3am.
EDIT:
https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2...self-prison/Hkp9wdGcZImoMBomJLMNVJ/story.html
countdown to murder conspiracies in 3, 2 . . .
Loser should of killed himself before doing what he did, not to mention the money he cost taxpayers after the fact.
County lockup. Safe as can be.Sad ending.
I'm gonna cry. Where is my safe space?![]()
It's possible that he was willing to accept the consequences of the murder(s) he actually did commit, but fought the conviction on the one he didn't commit. So once he was acquitted, he figured his fight was over and he was ready to accept that his life was over?
countdown to murder conspiracies in 3, 2 . . .
Injury update: Aaron Hernandez out eternally due to neck injury
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wtf why now?!Just heard breaking news on the radio on the way to work that he was found hung in his cell a bit after 3am.
EDIT:
https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2...self-prison/Hkp9wdGcZImoMBomJLMNVJ/story.html
wtf why now?!
of all the times he could have done it, why suicide after you've been AQUITTED of 2 murders?
Aaron Hernandez died innocent of murder, despite the conviction for which he was serving a life sentence.
It may be technical, but it's true. Aaron was convicted in 2015 of murdering Odin Lloyd. He was serving a life sentence when he was found hanging from his cell early Wednesday morning.
Under Massachusetts law, when a person dies while a criminal case is on appeal, the death effectively erases all the criminal proceedings ... it's as if Aaron was never arrested, never tried, never convicted.
The logic is that a person is not only entitled to a fair trial, they're entitled to appeal a conviction, and the process is not cemented until the appeal process is exhausted.
And there's more. Aaron is being sued civilly for wrongful death by Lloyd's family. When Aaron was alive, the family could use the criminal conviction to automatically establish liability ... but now they can't. They'll have to retry the murder allegation in front of a new jury, without Aaron present.
I guess he was only a tough guy with a gun in his hand. He so soft, a lemon meringue pie would have lasted longer in prison than him.