Fiancee of Aaron Hernandez tells Dr. Phil she does not believe his death was suicide

Fiancee of Aaron Hernandez tells Dr. Phil she does not believe his death was suicide
Fiancee of Aaron Hernandez tells Dr. Phil she does not believe his death was suicide, The fiancee of the late Aaron Hernandez does not believe the former Patriots tight end committed suicide inside his prison cell last month.
Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez said in an exclusive interview on "The Dr. Phil Show" she was shocked by the news of Hernandez’s death because he sounded positive and excited to speak to their daughter hours before he died on April 19.
“It’s just not the Aaron that I know,” Jenkins-Hernandez said in the interview. “I think that if he would have done something like this, it would have been at his worst, and I felt like we were, like it was looking so bright. I haven’t been able to grasp it yet … I don’t think this was a suicide.”
Jenkins' interview airs Monday and Tuesday.
Confusion and conspiracy theories surfaced on social media the day of Hernandez’s death. Hernandez's lawyer Jose Baez; his former agent, Brian Murphy, and current and former NFL players were among those to question the initial ruling of suicide.
 Aaron Hernandez...something doesn't feel right about him committing suicide...✌🏾...

GOOD MORNING TO ALL...
Absolutely no chance he took his own life. Chico was not a saint, but my family and I loved him and he would never take his own life.
Jenkins-Hernandez said the Massachusetts State Police report of its investigation into Hernandez’s death do not make sense to her. 
Also in the interview, she said Hernandez’s initial guilty verdict in the murder of Odin Lloyd — which has since been vacated — surprised her.
“I truly don’t [believe Hernandez killed Lloyd]. He may have been at the wrong place at the wrong time, but I don’t think what has been said to be out there to be accurate,” she said.
Days prior to his death, Hernandez was found not guilty of a 2012 double homicide.

It remains unclear whether Jenkins-Hernandez will receive a NFL pension or other funds due to ongoing wrongful-death litigation.

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