A stoic Aaron Hernandez faced a judge for the first time on Wednesday
afternoon, just hours after being taken from his home in handcuffs -
the proceedings convened to lodge formal charges against the now
infamous professional football player...
...the
State of Massachusetts charging former New England Patriots' tight end
Aaron Hernandez with six crimes, the most serious of which is first
degree Murder.
Hernandez was released from his contract
with the Patriots on Wednesday morning in response to being arrested,
the team and the NFL releasing short statements telling of their
disappointment with his alleged role in the homicide, and also
expressing their sorrow to the grieving family of the slain man.
Prosecutors
laid out in chilling detail the execution of 27 year old Odin
Lloyd, the trail of video surveillance footage and cell phone text
communications painting a brutal and damning connection between
Hernandez and the man whom he considered a friend...
...so
castigating the presentation that the Judge ordered Hernandez held
without bail, the first of what could be a savage string of losses for
the former Patriot and his high-priced legal team.
If
one were inclined to follow the elaborately itemized chronology
presented by the district attorney - the clarity of detail such that it
seemed like something right out of the movie Enemy of the State - it paints Hernandez as nothing but a street thug with a vendetta.
The
arraignment at the Attleboro District Court also saw Hernandez charged
with possessing a firearm without a license, possessing a large capacity
firearm and a firearm without an ID card.
Hernandez plead not guilty to all charges.
As
Bristol County assistant district attorney William McCauley presented
the synopsis of the State's evidence against Hernandez, the mother of
the victim fled the packed courtroom in tears - Hernandez, standing with
his attorney and handcuffs adorning his tattooed wrists stood glaring
at McCauley, occasionally breaking his focus and peering into the seated
crowd.
McCauley concluded his soliloquy by accusing
Hernandez of orchestrating Lloyd's "Execution", contacting accomplices
and putting into action a plan that would end Lloyd's life - while
defense attorney Michael Fee called the prosecution's argument
"Circumstantial" and "not a strong case", then addressing the bail
portion of the hearing by arguing that his client should be treated as
any other member of society and given the opportunity for bail so that
he "can return home to his eight month old daughter"...
...an
argument that held little weight given the evidence against Hernandez,
Judge Daniel O'Shea ordering Hernandez to be held without bail despite
the defenses argument that Hernandez had proven that he was not a flight
risk.
Part of his decision probably based on the fact
that the murder weapon is as yet unrecovered and Hernandez's proclivity
for destroying evidence as outlined by McCauley.
Hernandez's
legal team promised to appeal the bail decision, but in the interim his
next court appearance has been set for July 24th.
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