🏈 Super Bowl XLVIII- The Path to Meadowlands

no point hanging around sure, he obviously didnt let him plead for his life or anything. in and out and shot and gone in 4 minutes.

[quote=“Gman, post: 792828, member: 112”]some fucked up shit. it’ll be a media frenzy when the case proper begins. I find it odd though that the other 2 lads with him have been kept so much out of the attention, as it is clear they have been implicated and must have made claims to the cops on it all too, maybe a plea bargain to let Hernandez take the whole fall.

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[]On Monday, June 17, Hernandez and two other men picked up Lloyd in Dorchester, Mass., around 2:30 a.m. ET in a rented Nissan Altima.
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[
]According to McCauley, Hernandez was allegedly upset with Lloyd about speaking to someone at Club Rumor in Boston that weekend and claimed he couldn’t trust him.
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[]The four men drove around Boston, then headed south down Routes 128 and 95 before ending up on Route 152 in the Attleboro area. During this time, Lloyd exchanged texts with his sister. The last text, according to McCauley, was sent at 3:23 a.m.
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[
]Surveillance video showed the Altima entering a gravel road that leads to a field in an industrial park near Hernandez’s home at 3:23 a.m., according to McCauley.
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[]McCauley said employees in the park working at the time reported hearing gunshots. Surveillance images showed the Nissan leaving the scene at 3:27 a.m.
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[
]Hernandez and the two others in the car then returned to Hernandez’s home less than two minutes away and shut off the surveillance video system.
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[]Lloyd’s body was discovered around 5:30 p.m. by a jogger.
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[
]McCauley said Hernandez eventually changed cars, disposed of the gun and then destroyed his home surveillance system.
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It’s hard to imagine how the 3 of them wouldn’t be done for murder on that basis. I wouldn’t think it should matter too much who actually fired the gun.

When Artfooley finishes up his diploma in Ireland, he might move on to tackling the Maas bar so we have someone to ask these questions of.

from the Boston ESPN page; the text message to the sister is a vital one I would say.

Schaap reconstructs a timeline of events in the early morning hours of June 17, when Lloyd was murdered at an industrial park near Hernandez’s home.

  • As for motive, assistant district attorney William McCauley suggested Hernandez was angry with Lloyd because on the night of June 14 he had been talking to people Hernandez perceived as hostile to him.

  • According to McCauley, Lloyd sent text messages to his sister on June 17 indicating he was with Hernandez, in Lloyd’s words, “just so you know.”

  • Lloyd’s body was found at an industrial park half a mile from Hernandez’s home. In Lloyd’s pocket, McCauley said, were keys to a car Hernandez had rented.

  • At 3:30 a.m. on June 17, just minutes after prosecutors say several witnesses have sworn they heard gunshots at the industrial park, Hernandez could be seen on video at his home brandishing a weapon.

  • Bail was denied. Hernandez is being held at the Bristol county detention center in North Dartmouth and is next due in court July 24.

Hernandez sounds like a right dumb shit altogether

Belichick told him he could be the next oj simpson, and he took it the wrong way

+1

Keystone cops stuff

He is being questioned about another double murder in Boston last July according to Schefty.

The plot thickens

“@AdamSchefter: Boston PD has located red SUV with RI plates it was looking for as identified in July 2012 homicide. Aaron Hernandez rented it.”

[quote=“Sandymount Red, post: 793346, member: 1074”]The plot thickens

“@AdamSchefter: Boston PD has located red SUV with RI plates it was looking for as identified in July 2012 homicide. Aaron Hernandez rented it.”[/quote]
So it took a third murder before the Pats finally cut him. How many other players are on their roster who have committed double homicides? And what does all this mean for Gman?

Jay Cutler emailed this to an ESPN show in Chicago…

[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]Aaron Hernandez’s tutorial on how to get away with murder[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]1) make sure you are seen with the victim throughout the night of the crime[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]2) kill him really close to your home[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]3) make sure not to hide the body too well[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]4) make sure you are seen arriving home at an odd hour soon after the murder[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]5) make sure to leave traces of physical evidence, a gun casing and some bubble gum will do[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]6) when you damage evidence make sure that some data can still be recovered.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]7) make sure you keep illegal firearms in your home when a search warrant is immanent[/FONT][/SIZE]

[quote=“Gman, post: 793651, member: 112”]Jay Cutler emailed this to an ESPN show in Chicago…

[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]Aaron Hernandez’s tutorial on how to get away with murder[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]1) make sure you are seen with the victim throughout the night of the crime[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]2) kill him really close to your home[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]3) make sure not to hide the body too well[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]4) make sure you are seen arriving home at an odd hour soon after the murder[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]5) make sure to leave traces of physical evidence, a gun casing and some bubble gum will do[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]6) when you damage evidence make sure that some data can still be recovered.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=tahoma]7) make sure you keep illegal firearms in your home when a search warrant is immanent[/FONT][/SIZE][/quote]

He might be a tubby cunt, but that’s funny stuff

Classy stuff from Cutler

Per order by Judge Daniel J. O’Shea, 156 pages of impounded evidence in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts’ murder case against Aaron Hernandez was made public Tuesday afternoon. And in a separate filing in Florida, alleged murder accomplice Carlos Ortiz offered perhaps the most damaging statement yet about Hernandez, though the statement’s admissibility in a trial is questionable. The evidence seems to paint a damning and detailed portrait of the former Patriot as intricately involved in the murder of Odin Lloyd.
Some words of caution before considering the evidence, which is described through law enforcement accounts. First, not all of it may be admissible in a trial. A judge may deem some of it too far removed from the case or overly prejudicial. Second, the persuasiveness of admitted evidence would come under fire during a trial. Hernandez’s attorneys might claim certain pieces of evidence were improperly obtained, handled or stored, and science and technology experts hired by Hernandez will likely raise technical doubts and assert alternative conclusions.
The evidence released on Tuesday has been described only through the lens of prosecutors; in a trial, Hernandez’s lawyers would frame it quite differently. The word “evidence,” in other words, shouldn’t be equated with the phrase “conclusive proof.”

None of this is to say that Hernandez or his attorneys should feel good about the evidence that was released. They shouldn’t. But how that evidence would impact 12 jurors and two alternates in a trial is an altogether different matter.
With those caveats in mind, the evidence places Hernandez at the scene of the crime and describes him as acting suspicious in encounters with law enforcement. Among the most damaging: tire treads at the homicide’s location allegedly match the Nissan Altima that Hernandez rented from Enterprise. Even more suspicious, Hernandez returned the Altima damaged and Enterprise claims a bullet was found in it. While it’s possible that another Nissan Altima could have been at the scene of the homicide, these purported facts present a troubling coincidence for Hernandez’s attorneys to explain away.
Evidence also reveals repeated interaction between Hernandez and Lloyd in the days and hours leading up to Lloyd’s murder. For instance, witnesses place the two together at the Rumor Nightclub in Boston two days before Lloyd was killed. Surveillance video also shows an armed Hernandez returning home from Rumor and meeting two men in his driveway, including alleged murder accomplice Ernest Wallace. Other surveillance video shows Hernandez, Lloyd and others entering and exiting the Nissan Altima, as well as Hernandez holding a gun. Text messages also portray Hernandez as an organizer in meetings with Lloyd. If Hernandez is ultimately convicted, the vast array of electronic evidence likely will have played a major role.
In Hernandez’s defense, no video shows Hernandez or anyone else shooting Lloyd – in fact, we still don’t know who shot Lloyd. Also, there are gaps of time between video evidence that could leave room for question. Still, given the totality of evidence released on Tuesday, it doesn’t require great imagination to envision ways that Hernandez could have been involved in Lloyd’s murder.
Hernandez’s attorneys must also determine a strategy for rebuking the testimony of Ortiz, who is now cooperating with law enforcement. Ortiz is described as leading police to Hernandez’s “flop house” in Franklin, Mass., where police found .45 ammunition, which ballistics evidence confirmed is the type of bullet used to kill Lloyd. Even if Hernandez’s attorneys can effectively portray Ortiz as selling out Hernandez to save himself – Ortiz only faces firearm charges – that would not debunk the underlying ammunition evidence. Police are said to have found other implicating evidence in Hernandez’s apartment, including additional ammunition and a scale used to weigh drugs.

MIKE GEORGE/EPA
In a filing in Florida, Ortiz relayed to law enforcement a secret allegedly said by another purported accomplice, Wallace. Ortiz claims Wallace told him that Hernandez confided in him (Wallace) that he shot Lloyd. Ortiz’s statement is “double hearsay.” He is telling of another person’s statement that relays a third person’s statement. The statement is only admissible if prosecutors can show that each part of the combined statement would be admissible. Alternatively, Wallace – and not Ortiz – would likely have to testify that Hernandez made the statement for it to be admissible. Even if it were, it would require some clarification as to why Ortiz didn’t know who shot Lloyd until Wallace told him. The filing also contains information that a car wanted in connection with a double homicide in Boston last fall was recently found in Bristol, Conn. and had been rented in Hernandez’s name.
In the Massachusetts warrants, Hernandez is portrayed as uncooperative and suspicious when faced with police inquiries. Most notably, police say he slammed the door on them when they told him they were investigating a death. Curiously, it seems, Hernandez did not ask a question that common sense suggests would be asked: Who died? That said, Hernandez was within his rights to decline to speak until he first talked with his attorney, and minutes later he agreed to speak. While slamming the door on the police is not generally a wise move, it should not be equated with guilt. Also, he was not legally obligated to ask who died.
Hernandez’s attorneys may face criticism for declining to appeal Judge O’Shea’s release of the information. The alleged details revealed are unflattering for their client and might adversely impact potential jurors’ views of Hernandez. An appeal was unlikely to succeed, however, and the evidence would probably have become public at another time.
While the evidence released Tuesday offers a detailed account of Hernandez’s alleged participation in the murder of Lloyd, it accomplishes little by way of explaining why Hernandez would murder Lloyd. Interestingly, Hernandez’s fiancé, Shayanna Jenkins, describes Lloyd as a marijuana dealer. One might infer that the sale of marijuana from Lloyd to Hernandez could have something to do with Lloyd’s murder, but the evidence does not make that connection.
As for Hernandez’s potential involvement in the double murder in Boston, perhaps, some surmise, Lloyd was killed to keep him from talking about that double murder. That theory remains speculation, however, and is uncorroborated by the evidence released today. As long as Hernandez can argue that he had no reason to kill Lloyd, it could plant seeds of doubt in jurors’ minds as to his culpability.
Bottom line: The accounts released Tuesday reflect poorly on Hernandez. But the defense hasn’t yet challenged the evidence underlying these accounts. Moreover, even in the most flattering light for prosecutors, the accounts do not conclusively prove that Hernandez committed murder.
Michael McCann is a Massachusetts attorney and the founding director of the Sports and Entertainment Law Institute at the University of New Hampshire School of Law. He is also the distinguished visiting Hall of Fame Professor of Law at Mississippi College School of Law.

[SIZE=13px][FONT=arial][SIZE=6][SIZE=26px]Patriots CB Alfonzo Dennard arrested for suspicion of DUI[/SIZE][/SIZE]

[FONT=arial][SIZE=11px]By Brian McIntyre | Shutdown Corner – 3 hours ago[/SIZE][/FONT][/FONT][/SIZE]
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[][SIZE=11px][LEFT][LEFT]Email[/LEFT][/LEFT][/SIZE]
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][SIZE=11px][LEFT][LEFT] Share[/LEFT][/URL][URL=‘http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nfl-shutdown-corner/patriots-cb-alfonzo-dennard-arrested-suspicion-dui-120813122.html#’][LEFT][LEFT][CENTER][FONT=Arial][SIZE=12px][B]98[/B][/SIZE][/FONT][/CENTER][/LEFT][/LEFT][/LEFT][/SIZE]
[*][SIZE=11px][LEFT]Tweet[/LEFT][/SIZE]
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[SIZE=13px][FONT=arial][FONT=Georgia][SIZE=14px][RIGHT]http://l1.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/xBieSLV_1Lto9XfvJT7ucA–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en/blogs/sptusnflexperts/yahoo_alfonzodennarddui.jpg[SIZE=12px][FONT=arial]Alfonzo Dennard was arrested for suspicion of DUI (USA Today Sports Images)[/FONT][/SIZE][/RIGHT]
New England Patriots[/URL] cornerback [URL=‘http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/players/25934’]Alfonzo Dennard[/URL] [URL=‘http://www.omaha.com/article/20130711/NEWS/130719884/1707#.Ud6auhEaAus.twitter’]was arrested early Thursday morning in Lincoln, Neb. on suspicion of driving under the influence charges, Jay Withrow of the Omaha World-Herald reports.
According to the report, Dennard was pulled over at 2 a.m. local time after his vehicle was observed by police to be straddling a lane line between 50th and 56th Streets. Dennard allegedly refused to take a blood-alcohol test and was taken into custody.
The Patriots put out a terse statement on the matter a few hours after it was reported.

In April, the 23-year-old cornerback was sentenced to two years of probation and 30 days in jail, a sentence that was slated to begin on March 1, 2014, after he was convicted of assaulting a police officer outside a Lincoln, Neb. bar on April 21, 2012. That incident caused Dennard’s draft stock to plummet from the third round to the seventh round, where the former Nebraska standout was selected with the 224th overall pick by the Patriots.
Thursday morning’s arrest could be deemed a violation of his probation.
Dennard started seven of 10 games for the Patriots, playing in 53.47 percent of the defensive snaps while totaling 37 tackles and three interceptions, including one Dennard returned 87 yards for a touchdown. Dennard is projected to start at right cornerback for the Patriots this season. Considering the situation involving tight end Aaron Hernandez, who was charged last month with first-degree murder, it is very possible, if not likely, that the Patriots will severe ties with Dennard over this latest incident.[/SIZE][/FONT][/FONT][/SIZE]

[quote=“count of monte cristo, post: 800318, member: 348”][SIZE=13px][FONT=arial][SIZE=6][SIZE=26px]Patriots CB Alfonzo Dennard arrested for suspicion of DUI[/SIZE][/SIZE][/FONT][/SIZE]

[SIZE=13px][FONT=arial][SIZE=11px]By Brian McIntyre | Shutdown Corner – 3 hours ago[/SIZE][/FONT][/SIZE]

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[FONT=arial]Email[/FONT]

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[RIGHT][SIZE=14px][FONT=Georgia]http://l1.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/xBieSLV_1Lto9XfvJT7ucA–/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7cT04NTt3PTYzMA–/http://media.zenfs.com/en/blogs/sptusnflexperts/yahoo_alfonzodennarddui.jpg[SIZE=12px][FONT=arial]Alfonzo Dennard was arrested for suspicion of DUI (USA Today Sports Images)[/FONT][/SIZE][/FONT][/SIZE][/RIGHT]
New England Patriots[/URL] cornerback [URL=‘http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/players/25934’]Alfonzo Dennard[/URL] [URL=‘http://www.omaha.com/article/20130711/NEWS/130719884/1707#.Ud6auhEaAus.twitter’]was arrested early Thursday morning in Lincoln, Neb. on suspicion of driving under the influence charges, Jay Withrow of the Omaha World-Herald reports.
[SIZE=14px][FONT=Georgia]According to the report, Dennard was pulled over at 2 a.m. local time after his vehicle was observed by police to be straddling a lane line between 50th and 56th Streets. Dennard allegedly refused to take a blood-alcohol test and was taken into custody.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=Georgia]The Patriots put out a terse statement on the matter a few hours after it was reported.[/FONT][/SIZE]

[SIZE=14px][FONT=Georgia]In April, the 23-year-old cornerback was sentenced to two years of probation and 30 days in jail, a sentence that was slated to begin on March 1, 2014, after he was convicted of assaulting a police officer outside a Lincoln, Neb. bar on April 21, 2012. That incident caused Dennard’s draft stock to plummet from the third round to the seventh round, where the former Nebraska standout was selected with the 224th overall pick by the Patriots.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=Georgia]Thursday morning’s arrest could be deemed a violation of his probation.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=14px][FONT=Georgia]Dennard started seven of 10 games for the Patriots, playing in 53.47 percent of the defensive snaps while totaling 37 tackles and three interceptions, including one Dennard returned 87 yards for a touchdown. Dennard is projected to start at right cornerback for the Patriots this season. Considering the situation involving tight end Aaron Hernandez, who was charged last month with first-degree murder, it is very possible, if not likely, that the Patriots will severe ties with Dennard over this latest incident.[/FONT][/SIZE][/quote]

Is there no end to the depravity of the ‘Patriots’?

I’m just surprised he didnt punch the cop and do a legger like the last time.

Not sure what will happen with him now, would not be at all surprised to see him cut. I’m sure it would contravene his parole conditions, so might be long term repercussions with the law, as well as with the team.

[quote=“Gman, post: 800801, member: 112”]I’m just surprised he didnt punch the cop and do a legger like the last time.

Not sure what will happen with him now, would not be at all surprised to see him cut. I’m sure it would contravene his parole conditions, so might be long term repercussions with the law, as well as with the team.[/quote]

Thinly veiled this franchise are a shower of cunts.

Clady signs a five year deal to keep looking after Peyton’s blind side.

Really smart move from the Broncos. A lot of guaranteed money in the contract, but Clady is young and elite and will be perfect for keeping Peyton and his dodgy neck upright.