This Aaron Hernandez Doc Is Required Viewing Before American Sports Story
The story of Aaron Hernandez was both tragic and bizarre. Heâd fulfilled a dream held by millions, achieving football superstardom, a multimillion-dollar contract, and a trip to the Super Bowl with the New England Patriots. And yet it all collapsed amid horrifying evidence that implicated him in multiple murders. Netflixâs true-crime documentary event, the three-part Killer Inside: The Mind of Aaron Hernandez, offers a gripping and detailed examination of the case. If youâre watching FXâs American Sports Story: Aaron Hernandezâwhich places the harrowing tale in the spotlight once againâitâs required viewing. So hereâs what you need to know.
Who was Aaron Hernandez?Aaron Hernandez was born in Bristol, Connecticut, in 1989. His father, Dennis Hernandez, was a custodian, and his mother, Terri, was an administrative assistant. Both worked in local public schools.
His father had been a star athlete at Bristol Central High School, and the family was respected in the football-loving town. But Hernandezâs home life was reportedly chaotic. Both his parents were arrested at points during his childhoodâhis mother for allegedly working in a bookkeeping operation and his father for attempting to buy cocaine.
Dennis was an abusive presence who beat both Aaron and his brother, DJ, as well as their mother. DJ later told The Boston Globe that his brother had been molested as a child.
Growing up in a home that the Globe described as âdeeply homophobic,â Hernandez also reportedly struggled with his sexuality, keeping a relationship with a friend and teammate a closely guarded secret. â âF*ggotâ was used all the time in our house,â DJ told the newspaper. âAll the time. Standing. Talking. Acting. Looking. It was the furthest thing my father wanted you to even look like in our household. This was not acceptable to him.â
Hernandez was Bristol Centralâs star athlete, excelling in track, football, and basketball. He initially planned to follow his brother to the University of Connecticut, where DJ played football, but broke a verbal commitment to the school and decided to join the University of Florida Gators in Gainesville, alongside their star quarterback, Tim Tebow.
Dennis died of complications from a routine surgery while Hernandez was still in high school, a loss that, despite his dadâs abuse, his Gators coach Urban Meyer would describe as decimating to him. He entered college still grieving at just seventeen years old, and he quickly began getting into trouble.
In a fight over a bar tab, only four months into his time in Florida, Hernandez reportedly burst a bar managerâs eardrum with a sucker punch. Police noted that after âworking on an agreementâ with the university, the victim did not want to pursue charges.
Win McNamee//Getty ImagesHernandez celebrates a touchdown during Super Bowl XLVI.
Later, a witness described a man fitting Hernandezâs description as the culprit in a double shooting that left two men injured after a night of clubbing, and the young athlete was questioned about the crime. But others at the scene described a shooter who didnât resemble Hernandez, and no one was ever charged.
Despite his off-field troubles, Hernandez stood out as a college athlete. The Gators won the championship his sophomore year, and he won the John Mackey Award for best college tight end in 2009. But Meyer reportedly let it be known that Hernandez wouldnât be allowed to return to the team for his senior year, so at age twenty, he entered the NFL draft. He was one of the most promising athletes that year yet wasnât selected until the fourth round due to his troubled history and poor performance on personality tests, one of which noted that he was ânot well-adjusted emotionally.â
Still, in 2010 he was drafted by the New England Patriots. The team made it to the Super Bowl in 2012, and though the New York Giants won the championship, Hernandez scored a touchdown during the game. That year, he signed a five-year, $40 million contract extension with the Patriots and received an unprecedented $12.5 million bonus.
Regardless of these successes, Hernandez continued to behave erratically and violentlyâin February 2013, he allegedly shot his friend Alexander Bradley in the face and dumped him in a Miami parking lot. Bradley, a career criminal, lost an eye but did not tell police who shot him. Instead, he later filed a civil suit against the athlete that was settled in 2016.
Boston Globe//Getty ImagesA photo of Odin Lloyd at his home in Dorchester, Massachusetts.
Who was Odin Lloyd?By 2013, Hernandez was engaged to be married to his high school sweetheart, Shayanna Jenkins, and the two had a daughter, Avielle. Shayannaâs sister, Shaneah, was dating a twenty-seven-year-old landscaper and semi-professional football player, Odin Lloyd, and the two men became friends.
On June 17, 2013, Lloydâs body was found one mile from Hernandezâs North Attleborough home. Heâd been shot multiple times, and police quickly zeroed in on Hernandez, Lloydâs only known friend in the area. Evidence connecting him to the crime scene abounded. DNA taken from a blunt discovered near the body matched the famed football playerâs, and a shell casing found inside a car rented in Hernandezâs name matched the bullets that had killed Lloyd.
Hernandez was arrested on June 26 and released by the Patriots the same day.
The investigation into Lloydâs murder led police to the home of Hernandezâs cousin. There they found a Toyota 4-Runner, a vehicle that had been wanted in connection with the 2012 Boston double murder of Daniel Jorge Correia de Abreu and Safiro Teixeria Furtado. Bradley claimed that one of the men accidentally bumped into Hernandez at a nightclub, causing the tight end to spill his drink and sending him into a rage. According to Bradley, he and Hernandez followed the menâs vehicle after they left the club, and when they pulled alongside it, Hernandez sprayed bullets into the car.
Boston Globe//Getty ImagesThe graves of Daniel Jorge Correia de Abreu and Safiro Teixeria Furtado in Bostonâs Mount Hope Cemetery.
No certain motive for Lloydâs murder was determined, but Hernandez was convicted of the crime on April 15, 2015, and received a sentence of life in prison. Two friends who were with him on the night of the killing, Carlos Ortiz and Ernest Wallace, were convicted of being accessories to the crime.
In 2017, Hernandez was tried for the Boston double murder but amid his accusation that it was actually Bradley who shot the two men, he was acquitted of the crime.
How did Aaron Hernandez die?On April 19, 2017, just five days after his acquittal for the murders of de Abreu and Furtado, Hernandez hanged himself in his cell at the Souza-Baranowski Correctional Center. The families of the three men Hernandez was accused of murdering all filed civil suits against him and eventually reached settlements with his estate.
The Boston University CTE Center, which has examined the brains of dozens of former NFL players for chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a degenerative illness caused by repeated head injuries that can result in behavioral problems and dementia, studied Hernandezâs brain after his death. The lab reported that the twenty-seven-year-old had a severe case of the disorder.
âEspecially in the frontal lobes, which are very important for decision-making, judgment, and cognition, we could see damage to the inner chambers of the brain,â BU CTE Center director Ann McKee said in 2017. âThis would be the first case weâve ever seen of that kind of damage in such a young individual.â