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The rise and fall of Aaron Hernandez: How he went from a rising star to a convicted murderer and the newest face of football's concussion crisis

Aaron Hernandez seemingly had everything, but the death of his father had a lasting impact.

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Former NFL tight end Aaron Hernandez committed suicide in his jail cell in April and on Thursday, his attorney announced that Hernandez's brain was found to be suffering from

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Hernandez was serving a life sentence for the 2013 murder of semiprofessional football player Odin Lloyd, 27, whom Hernandez knew socially.

Hernandez's life was a tragic roller coaster that began with the death of his father, saw him rise to stardom in both college and the NFL, and then fell apart when he was charged in the deaths of three people before taking his own life.

Below is a look at how Hernandez went from football star to convicted murderer and the newest face of football's concussion crisis.

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Hernandez grew up in a tough area of Bristol, Connecticut, and his dad died when Hernandez was 16 years old.

Hernandez spoke about the death of his father while in college: "It was more like a shock. Everyone was close to my father, but I was the closest. I was with him more than my friends. When that happened, who do I talk to, who do I hang with? It was tough."

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Hernandez was the No. 1 tight end recruit in the country as a sophomore and originally committed to play football at the University of Connecticut, where his father had played and where his brother D.J. was the starting quarterback at the time. However, after the death of his father his junior year, Hernandez decided to attend the University of Florida.

Hernandez reportedly started hanging out with a crew of small-time criminals after the death of his father, a group that included the other two people who were allegedly with Hernandez on the night Odin Lloyd was murdered.

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Hernandez's mother Terri on how the death of his father impacted Hernandez: "It was a rough process, and I didn't know what to do for him. He would rebel. It was very, very hard, and he was very, very angry. He wasn't the same kid, the way he spoke to me. The shock of losing his dad, there was so much anger."

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Hernandez played three seasons at Florida and won a national championship in 2008.

Hernandez's mother said in 2009 that the Gators football team became Hernandez's family and head coach Urban Meyer, "became his father more or less."

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At the University of Florida, Tim Tebow was Hernandez's "life instructor."

Hernandez and Meyer were so close that the pair would read the Bible together every morning at 7:30 in Meyer's office.

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Hernandez's violent history can be traced back to the university, where Tebow once tried to break up a fight between Hernandez and a bouncer. That bouncer reportedly suffered a ruptured eardrum during the fight.

After his junior year, Hernandez was drafted by the Patriots in the fourth round.

He spent three seasons with the Patriots, catching 18 touchdown passes and teaming up with Tom Brady and Rob Gronkowski to form a nearly unstoppable offense.

Hernandez even caught a touchdown pass in Super Bowl XLVI, a 21-17 loss to the New York Giants.

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A family friend told Rolling Stone that Hernandez was addicted to angel dust for more than a year before the murder of Lloyd, and was growing increasingly paranoid, even carrying a rifle in his gym bag.

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Hernandez was said to be trying to cut ties with the group of criminals from his childhood. He even reportedly told Patriots head coach Bill Belichick that he was worried his friends would try to kill him.

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Hernandez also smoked marijuana, reports said. There were even reports before his most recent murder trial that his defense team might argue that smoking a lot of weed made Hernandez violent.

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Hernandez was charged with murder in the death of Lloyd in June of 2013. Police seemed to surprise a shirtless Hernandez at his front door.

Hernandez' fiancee, Shayanna Jenkins, testified for the prosecution after receiving immunity. She testified she had seen a gun in the house similar to the one used in the murder, but also said she couldn't remember many of the details of the time around the shooting.

She was also accused of hiding evidence, with investigators alleging that she took a box out of Hernandez's basement, left the house with it, and returned later without it.

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The evidence used against Hernandez included text messages between Hernandez and Lloyd on the night of the murder that suggested they were together and text messages between Lloyd and his sister saying he was with somebody he referred to as "NFL."

In addition, a shell casing found in a rented car matched shell casings found near Lloyd's body. The casing also had DNA on it matching Hernandez' DNA.

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Hernandez was also seen on his own surveillance video carrying something that looked like a gun shortly after the time of the murder. Police also reported that Hernandez destroyed his security system but did not remove the tape.

The trial was nearly declared a mistrial when two jurors reported that they had been followed by a local television station's truck.

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In April of 2015, Hernandez was found guilty of the murder of Lloyd and sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

After the trial, jurors said they were shocked when a defense attorney admitted Hernandez was at the scene of Lloyd's murder. The attorney argued that Hernandez had only witnessed the murder and had not committed it.

Hernandez had spent the last 15 months on trial for the murders of Safiro Furtado and Daniel de Abreu. Prosecutors alleged that Hernandez had felt disrespected over a spilled drink in a night club and later shot the two men at a red light.

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During the double-murder trial, prosecutors argued that a tattoo of a gun on Hernandez matched the gun used in the killings.

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In college, Hernandez said in an interview that the tattoos on his arms tell his life story, noting that on his right arm, "everything is good," and that the left arm includes things such as "the pain we all go through."

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Just five days before his death, Hernandez was acquitted of the double-murder and other charges in the case. There was speculation that this would help an appeal in the Lloyd murder, because covering up the earlier murders was considered a motive in the Lloyd case.

Hernandez left behind another victim, his 4-year-old daughter. After being acquitted in the double-murder case, he blew her a kiss.

After Hernandez's death, his brain was donated to the CTE Center at Boston University, where they look for signs of the disease linked to brain trauma and concussions.

Hernandez's brain was found to have stage 3 CTE (on a scale of 1-4). According to his attorney, they were told "it was the most severe case they had ever seen for someone of Aaron's age." The family has filed a lawsuit against the NFL.

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While most legal experts don't think the family will win the case, it is still problematic for the NFL as Hernandez was just 27 years old, had played just three years in the NFL, and expressed extreme examples of CTE symptoms, which include violent behavior and suicidal thoughts.

For better or worse, this is the newest face of football's concussion crisis.

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