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CNN Live Event/Special

Downward Spiral: Aaron Hernandez

Aired July 05, 2014 - 21:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


SUSAN CANDIOTTI, CNN SPECIAL REPORT HOST: He was the all-American destined to be an all-pro.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: He was projected to be one of the best tight ends of his generation.

CANDIOTTI: Instead, Aaron Hernandez is an accused killer. First, one murder charge.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: He's in question all the time.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: You think your boy did it?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: No, I don't want him to have done it. No.

CANDIOTTI: Then ...

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Aaron Hernandez then fired a 38-caliber revolver multiple times.

CANDIOTTI: Two more charges of murder.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It was a brutal double homicide.

CANDIOTTI: How in the world did he get here?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I think that he had had someone at 16 when his dad died that could have guided him. He may have gone in a different direction.

CANDIOTTI: And how much further could he fall?

Tonight, Downward Spiral: Inside the Case Against Aaron Hernandez.

It's a spring time Saturday in New England Patriot country, a perfect day for football.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We wake up (inaudible).

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: One, two, three.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: A block down in a pool.

CANDIOTTI: Mike Branch coaches the Boston Bandits, a semi-pro team. He remembers another day just like this. June 15th 2013, something seemed out of place.

MIKE BRANCH, ASSISTANT COACH, BOSTON PATRIOTS: A black suburban pulls like right up on my car. I'm like, who's pulling right in front of my car?

CANDIOTTI: In the driver seat, Bandit defensive end, 27-year old Odin Lloyd, then I see a smile, "Coach".

CANDIOTTI: Branch thinks it's odd because Lloyd doesn't own a car.

BRANCH: I'm like, "Who's car is this?"

CANDIOTTI: Branch has his suspicions but he never gets a straight answer. Lloyd is busy telling his buddies about the good time he had at a club the night before.

BRANCH: All he say he was at the club with Mr. Hernandez and they were partying and he had a good time and that Mr. Hernandez spend a good amount of money.

CANDIOTTI: Mr. Hernandez is Aaron Hernandez, a $40 million rising star with the New England Patriots.

How much money?

BRANCH: He say like 10 grand.

CANDIOTTI: 10 grand? In one night?

BRANCH: That's what he said, yes.

CANDIOTTI: When the club closes, the evening continues at an apartment the football player keeps near the Patriot stadium.

Odin Lloyd's best buddies Darryl Hodge, and Darryl Sweet say their friend wasn't normally a big partier, they know a different side of him. The friend they described was passionate about football.

DARRYL HODGE, ODIN LLOYD'S FRIEND: The whistle blows, he's coming in full throttle.

CANDIOTTI: And family.

DARYL SWEET, FRIEND OF ODIN LLOYD: He definitely always took care of mama and his sisters.

OLIVIA THIBOU, ODIN LLOYD'S SISTER: My brother and I were kind of like a -- I wouldn't say best friends but, you know, as close as siblings can get.

BRANCH: In and out. You know what I'm talking about?

CANDIOTTI: Branch who also coached Lloyd in high school didn't hesitate to give him advice as an adult and an occasional reality check. BRANCH: There's some point, I realized I'm not going to the NFL, this is just going to be for fun. What I got to do is start preparing myself alive and ...

CANDIOTTI: He says Lloyd was doing landscaping while figuring out what next.

BRANCH: I spoke to him about, you know, taking fire fighter test.

CANDIOTTI: Lloyd also began dating college student Shaneah Jenkins, she's the link between the young man who dreamed of the NFL and the all-American who made it.

What's your understanding of how they met?

HODGE: Their dating sisters.

CANDIOTTI: Shaneah Jenkins is the younger sister of Shayanna who's engaged to Hernandez and mother of his little girl.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I played 13 years.

BURNET: Former Patriots running back Kevin Faulk is a friend of Hernandez. He played with him for two and a half seasons.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Tight end and a receiver body, that could play running back, that could return a punch, return kicks.

CANDIOTTI: But how close were the talented tight end and the struggling landscaper?

How much do you know that they hung out together?

HODGE: Really? There's two different worlds. But he had one world, and we got our world.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I'm just checking out my new camera ...

CANDIOTTI: On Sunday, June 16th, Father's Day 2013, Odin Lloyd is cruising with his friends in that mysterious black suburban.

SWEET: We had a music playing, you know, jamming to the music and stuff.

HODGE: We're laughing, we're talking and Odin driving, he got the one hand type driving and like he's just having fun.

Later, we went to my mom's (ph) house, he was playing pool.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Over the table.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Over the ball.

HODGE: I've seen one of the most spectacular shots I've ever seen.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: You have no chance in hell. CANDIOTTI: It was a good day.

SWEET: Oh, it was a great day.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: You got that?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I did.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I hope you all got that.

HODGE: A great day.

CANDIOTTI: And it was coming to an end. After Lloyd got a text from his job saying he had to work the next morning.

HODGE: Then he got another text asking him to hang out.

CANDIOTTI: A text from Hernandez.

HODGE: And the text alluded to just, "let's have another great night."

CANDIOTTI: I take that there was a part of you that thought, "Man, you got to go to work the next day."

HODGE: Go home I say. I was like, "it's already like nine and nine- ish.|

CANDIOTTI: So when you guys left each other, what do you remember saying to him?

HODGE: I'm going to see you later.

CANDIOTTI: Little did he know there would be no later.

Monday, June 17th, 5:37 p.m., Lloyd's body is discovered by a jogger in North Attleborough, 35 miles south of where he lives.

Here at the crime scene, investigators find Odin Lloyd's wallet, his driver's license, and five 45 caliber shell casings. They suspect he was first shot in the back and then finished off as he was lying face up in this secluded area of an industrial park.

Darryl Hodge learned of the murder from Lloyd's sister Olivia who calls him.

HODGE: I could hear.

CANDIOTTI: Did she say he's dead?

HODGE: In between the cries and the (inaudible), "Darryl, Odin is dead." I say, "Olivia, I'll be there in a minute." I got to the house, I got inside, and like ...

CANDIOTTI: And you saw his mom. What did she say? HODGE: Darryl, who killed my son? I'm like, what do you say to that? I mean, I felt my knees, gave her a hug. I wrapped my hand around her hip and I was like, "Mom I don't know." I said, "I don't know."

CANDIOTTI: That night was tough for Daryl Sweet who was also at Lloyd's home.

SWEET: I was going to back and I'm going to stay in my car.

CANDIOTTI: What were the questions in your head?

SWEET: Who was he with? I didn't know. Who he possibly could have been with until I got the news about Shaquilla's text?

CANDIOTTI: Shaquilla is Lloyd's youngest sister. She sees him picked up from their house and driven away in the middle of the night. Just before Lloyd dies, police say he send Shaquilla chilling text messages.

At 3:07 a.m., Lloyd asks "You saw who I'm with." At 3:11, he checks again texting, "Hello?" 3:19, Shaquilla answers, "My phone was dead. Who was that?" 3:22 a.m., Lloyd answers, "NFL" and a minute later at 3:23 a.m. Lloyd sends his very last text, "Just so you know."

Was he trying to leave a clue that he was with Hernandez?

HODGE: Odin not crazy and Odin don't work in like mysterious ways. If he left them crumbs, it means something was going down.

CANDIOTTI: But what was going down and why?

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

CANDIOTTI: For Darryl Hodge, going to the gym, that means lifting weights. But he's also carrying one, trying to understand why someone killed his best friend Odin Lloyd.

HODGE: I should still be lifting with my bro. He should still be trying to dunk.

CANDIOTTI: After a jogger finds Odin Lloyds bullet riddled body, police quickly find their first pieces of evidence, distinctive tire tracks, Lloyd's cellphone and keys for that black suburban he'd been driving all weekend. Police quickly learn it was rented by New England Patriot, Aaron Hernandez.

Over the next several days, investigator search his home and cars, removing bags of possible evidence, including Hernandez's cellphone. But a law enforcement source says, it's badly cracked, possibly intentionally before it was handed over.

June 26h, 2013, nine days after the murder of Odin Lloyd, Hernandez is arrested.

The charges, first degree premeditated murder and having illegal weapons. He's plea... HERNANDEZ: Not guilty.

CANDIOTTI: And he's no longer a New England Patriot.

BILL BELICHICK, HEAD COACH NEW ENGLAND PATRIOT: I and other members of the organization were shocked and disappointed.

CANDIOTTI: Hernandez is canned before he reaches the court house.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Hernandez is charged a very serious crime but that shouldn't be not calling without bail.

CANDIOTTI: And he's staying in jail. He's attempts at bail, denied.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I think the (inaudible) has presented a case that circumstantial to be sure but very, very strong.

CANDIOTTI: Hours after his arrest, the public hears those details for the first time. 9:02 p.m. Father's Day, June 16th.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The defendant has sent a text message to a friend of his who is out of state. Please make it back.

CANDIOTTI: That friend is Ernest Wallace, in Hernandez's home town of Bristol Connecticut, more than a hundred miles away. At 9:35 Hernandez text him again, "Get your ass up here." Wallace is joined by Carlos Ortiz, both have criminal records. And about the same time, Hernandez is also texting Lloyd, "I'm coming to grab that tonight. You going to be around? I need that and we could step for a little again."

Then Lloyd doesn't answer immediately, Hernandez sends another text at 9:34, "What up." Lloyd answers at 9:37, "All right, where?" At 9:39 Hernandez replies, "I don't know. It don't matter but I'm going to hit you when I'm that way (ph).

After midnight, surveillance steals (ph) released by authorities show Wallace and Ortiz arriving at Hernandez's home. Inside, the football player is holding, what appears to be a gun and his not happy.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: He makes a statement, he's upset that he can't trust anyone anymore. The three of them departed the defendant's home at 1:12 in the morning in the silver Nissan Altima.

CANDIOTTI: 2:10 a.m. he's on camera at this gas station.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The defendant bought gas, he bought two other items, Bubblicious, blue cotton candy gum and rolling papers for marijuana.

CANDIOTTI: About 20 minutes later, 2:32 a.m. a camera captures the same Altima pulling up to Lloyd's home. Lloyd gets inside. As they start driving a sign of trouble. Hernandez tells Lloyd he doesn't trust him, angry about who he was talking to at the club where they partied Friday night. How do investigators know about the conversation in the car? Ortiz sources say squeal starting questioning. At 3:22 a.m. a string of security cameras at an industrial park pick up the Altima as it heads toward a secluded area.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: There are no homes there, there are no artificial lighting.

CANDIOTTI: It's now 3:23 and Odin Lloyd sends his sister that final text, telling her he's with NFL, adding, "Just so you know." Between 3:23 and 3:27, workers near by tell police, they hear gun shots.

Hernandez's home is only a half mile from the murder scene. At 3:29, a camera shows an Altima pulling up in Hernandez's drive way. Only three people get out. Odin Lloyd isn't one of them.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The defendant was walking through the house...

CANDIOTTI: Back inside the house, images show Wallace then again with Ortiz in the basement doorway with Hernandez nearby.

Add this, Hernandez wearing white with a gun in his left hand. Police, a law enforcement source says, believe this is the murder weapon, a 45 caliber gun. It remains missing.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: And they all then go down to the basement. Once in the basement, the surveillance gets shutoff.

CANDIOTTI: Around 5:30 that evening, prosecutors say Hernandez and his two friends show up here to return their rented Nissan Altima. The managers tells investigators, Hernandez offers her a blue bubble gum, it's the same kind he bought at that gas station, and now it's showing up in the returned rental along with the 45 caliber bullet casing.

The manager tosses the gum and bullet casing in a dumpster. Police say the shell came from the same gun that fire the rounds at the murder scene. And they say tire impressions taken near the body match the kind of tires on the Altima. Hernandez's attorneys won't comment on the case and all parties are muscled by a gag order.

For family and friends of Odin Lloyd knowing some details helps. But they don't answer this question.

BRANCH: Why? That's the biggest question, why.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

CANDIOTTI: As Aaron Hernandez adjust to life behind bars, charged with murder, yet another accusation of gun violence makes headlines.

Four months before Odin Lloyd is gunned down, the football player is at Tootsie's strip club in Miami. A law enforcement source says Hernandez drops about 10 grand that night. One of the men he's with, Alexander Bradley. Prosecutors described him as Hernandez' former right hand man. By morning, Bradley is shot in the face, dumped out of a vehicle and left for dead, still wearing his now blood soaked VIP wrist band from the club.

It happened here, an industrial park about 65 miles north of Tootsie's strip club in Miami. It's 7 AM, two men who work in that building hear a gun shot and tell police they rush outside and find the body of a bloody man lying in a fetal position just about here, according to a police report.

One of the men asked the victim "Who shot you?"

Bradley tells them he doesn't know. Police retrieve this bullet fragment from his head but Bradley won't give them any details.

MICHAEL MCCANN, LEGAL ANALYST AND WRITER, SPORTS ILLUSTRATED: When the police investigated this incident, Alexander Bradley didn't point a finger at Hernandez.

CANDIOTTI: That changes when Bradley sues claiming Aaron Hernandez caused him his right eye.

Bradley later tells prosecutors he was shot after Hernandez felt disrespected during an argument over a missing cellphone.

After Bradley is shot, prosecutor say Hernandez gets a new right hand man, Ernest Wallace.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: This defendant is more commonly known by his nickname which is "Hobo."

CANDIOTTI: Wallace has a long criminal history. Prosecutors say he sells and uses drugs, including the hallucinogen, angel dust or PCP.

He's not the only one. Court document show Wallace's side-kick, Carlos Ortiz, admits he is regularly abusing PCP, alcohol, and THC, pot.

Sources tell CNN Aaron Hernandez also smoke a lot of pot. One calling it a boat load.

Prosecutors say the tight-end would give Odin Lloyd money to buy him marijuana. CNN obtained this photograph of a stack of blunts. A source says it was made with marijuana, said to be supplied by Hernandez. Sources tell CNN Aaron Hernandez also use angel dust and that could've made him paranoid. One says "He felt he was a target. That people were coming after him."

MARY ELLEN O'TOOLE: Combination of those drugs depending on the long term use of the drugs and the amount of drugs could cause someone to become violent, could cause someone to become very paranoid, could cause someone to over react to a situation, appear to be more impulsive.

CANDIOTTI: That kind of behavior doesn't describe the Aaron Hernandez, many remember growing up in Bristol, Connecticut where his family was celebrated as a local sports dynasty.

BOB MONTGOMERY, THE BRISTOL PRESS: I don't think there was another family that was more familiar in Bristol. Aaron was our "golden boy." He had the family traits. His father and his uncle were standout athletes.

CANDIOTTI: His older brother DJ, was a sports hero too.

Bob Montgomery covers high school sports for the Bristol press.

MONTGOMERY: Aaron did track, in addition to football, he also did basketball. He was described in any sport he played, as the man playing with children.

MCMILLAN, HERNANDEZ HIGHSCHOOL TEAMMATE: He was just kind of like goofy and fun, kind of had a baby face and, you know, all the teachers love their...

CANDIOTTI: Brad McMillan and Andrew Ragali played basketball with Aaron beginning in middle school.

ANDREW RAGALI: He was twice the size of me. We're really at the same height but he was just more athletic, obviously, and I mean, he practice like all the time.

CANDIOTTI: Practice because his father Dennis pushed him constantly.

SHERIFF THOMAS HODGSON, BRISTOL COUNTY: His father was pretty strict. I mean, he told me his father used to make him -- to shoot 500 shots before he went, sometimes to play with his friends. His dad clearly kept them anchored.

MONTGOMERY: I saw a closeness with them that I have never seen before. There was something about Dennis and Aaron, the way they intertwined. It was it is magic to my eyes.

CANDIOTTI: But in a heartbeat, that closeness is gone.

MCMILLAN: I'll sit in Math class with another team mate, phone rang, he go in to go pick up the phone, and then she said he need to go out to coaches room. The Coach walks in, he says, "Dennis has passed away."

CANDIOTTI: Dennis Hernandez, Aaron's father, his anchor, dies after routine hernia surgery. It hits 16-year old Aaron hard.

MCMILLAN: He was just sad. He can't stop the tears.

RAGALI: I feel uncomfortable just to see him so hurt. I felt bad for him.

CANDIOTTI: That father-son relationship comes up in conversations with Sheriff Thomas Hodgson who runs the jail where Hernandez is being held.

HODGSON: Clearly, at 16 years old losing your father. It would be very easy to fall into the lifestyle of following people that don't help you make the best choices.

CANDIOTTI: One choice he makes is to tattoo some of his dad's advice on his arms.

HERNANDEZ: That's a quote my father used to give me. If it is to be, it is up to me. Basically saying wherever I want my life to be, it's up to me to make it out that way.

CANDIOTTI: When it comes time to make his college pick, not even his brother DJ can get Aaron to join him with their dad Blade, the University of Connecticut.

DJ HERNANDEZ: At first, he wouldn't talk to me, but there's days, he's saying like, "It's our dream to play together. Come on, please."

CANDIOTTI: But Aaron stands firm believing his football career will soar in greater(ph) country.

Coming up, a promising college career overshadowed by trouble off the field.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

CANDIOTTI: With the man who kept him grounded now gone, Aaron Hernandez takes a pass on his father's school, the University of Connecticut. Cutting his high school senior year in half, he heads to the University of Florida.

MCMILLAN: Then I was kind of just found (ph) that he wasn't going to be on our basketball team.

RAGALI: Yeah.

CANDIOTTI: In January 2007, he joins the Gators and start quarterback team Tim Tebow. By April, still long before the Gator season opener, there's trouble off the field. The rookie team loses school at this popular off campus restaurant.

There's an argument between Aaron Hernandez and the manager over a bill. Tim Tebow tries to calm things down and settle the check but according to this police report, it all ends with Aaron Hernandez, sucker punching the manager on the left side of his head bursting an eardrum.

The manager later tells police University of Florida coaches and lawyers have contacted him and they're working on an agreement. A university spokesman says they are not aware of any settlement.

Five months later in September, there's more trouble. This time, a shooting near the university. It begins with young men snatching gold net (ph) chains at a local club. There's an argument in the parking lot across the street. Police reports several UF football players are involved including Hernandez.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I know Hernandez was there, there was trouble. There was arguing loud. CANDIOTTI: The suspected chain snatchers get into this man's car. His name is Cory (ph) and doesn't want his face shown for fear of retribution.

Can you point out roughly where it was?

Moments after leaving the club, someone fires into Cory's (ph) Crown Vic hitting him in the head.

Can you tell me and show me where is it that that bullet went? It came right about there.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I can't imagine what he would've felt that night.

CANDIOTTI: Cory's (ph) Aunt Stephanie (ph) remembers he nearly died.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: (Inaudible) a couple of times.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: They had to take half of my skull to get the bullet out. I was in rehab and they've helped me to walk again and talk again.

CANDIOTTI: Police interview more than 20 people and they try to question Hernandez, but he's the only one who doesn't make a statement after revoking his right to council. At that time, his mother, Terri Hernandez tells the Orlando Sentinel "I know he was at the club, but he never saw any shooting."

It's still an open case. No one's ever been charged. Both (Cory) and his aunt Stephanie have been trying to get to the truth for seven years.

You've done a lot to try to get to the heart of what happened. What about going to the University of Florida?

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: I've tried it. I was just told that they would put the guys on curfew so that they could, I guess, lessen their activities in clubs and things of that nature. I would've like to have seen some more in depth questioning of those football players.

CANDIOTTI: Citing privacy laws, the University of Florida won't discuss specifics of how players are disciplined. Was Hernandez on a slippery slope? He was tearing up the field as a Gator, but some who knew him were worried especially when he was unsupervised away from the game.

"If you could keep him on one side, he'd be fine." One source put it. "The problem was he couldn't stay away from the other side" adding "It was a recipe for disaster." And he was a recipe that included marijuana. Hernandez was suspended, at least, once for using the drug. It's an issue that follows him when he enters the draft, his junior year.

MCCANN: Teams spent a lot of time on background checks, hiring private investigators to be sure that this is somebody who enter the NFL and stay out of trouble.

CANDIOTTI: And how far back do the go?

KEVIN FAULIK, FOOTBALL TEAMMATE: If he done something in middle school, they are going to go back and find somebody that was around that time of accident.

CANDIOTTI: Trying to head up trouble before the draft, Hernandez goes on the offensive writing a letter to the patriots, director of personnel. "If you draft me as a member of the New England Patriots," he wrote, "I will willfully submit to a bi-weekly drug test throughout my rookie season."

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Day three, round four.

MCCANN: Prior to the draft, Aaron Hernandez was projected as a player that could be a first round pick and no later than a second round pick.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: And now with another selection, they go Aaron Hernandez.

CANDIOTTI: He ends the 113th pick passed over until the fourth round.

MCCANN: I have to believe that him following so far is more than just a story about marijuana that there were questions raised and background checks about him. It caused teams to say, "We're going to downgrade him on our draft board."

CANDIOTTI: But during his first year with the Patriots, he proves himself.

MCCANN: There were questions that, "Oh, he's too young to be in the league. That he's not going to be able to get double check system." He was able to debunk those by having a solid season.

CANDIOTTI: By the end of his second season, Hernandez has star power inking (ph) up five-year, $40 million extension.

HERNANDEZ: You can't come here and act reckless and you do your own staff. I act by the active the way I want to act but you get changed by (inaudible) way.

CANDIOTTI: What no one knew at the time, one month before he signs that deal, the football player parties at a Boston club.

That night, two young men are shot and killed after leaving that same club by a man driving a silver SUV. Is there a connection?

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

CANDIOTTI: It's a silver SUV, but in the life of Aaron Hernandez, it's much more. While searching his cousin's home for clues in Odin Lloyd's murder, police stumble on a Toyota 4Runner. It's in a garage and it belongs to a leasing company who loaned it to the patriot tight end in exchange for promotional work. For the past year, Boston police have been looking for an SUV linked to an unsolved double murder. This appears to be it.

How difficult has this loss been for you sir as father?

CANDIOTTI: Ernesto Abreu's son Daniel was killed in that drive by shooting outside of Boston night club along with his friend Safiro Furtado on July 16, 2012. Witnesses say two men in a silver SUV with Rhode Island plates pulls alongside Abreu's car, shots are fired.

What do you miss the most about him?

We would hang out like brothers, Abreu's father tells me.

Abreu's son Daniel was a police officer in Cape Verde and wanted to do the same work in the U.S.

Safiro Furtado spoke three languages and worked as a tour guide in Cape Verde. He had only been in the U.S. for six months.

How much do you miss him?

Losing a son, his father says, is like losing a hand.

Two grieving fathers searching for answers.

Finding that SUV and other chips (ph) leads to a stunning discovery. Aaron Hernandez seen on security video police say with another man following Abreu and Furtado into that night club and stalking them in a silver SUV after they leave.

Almost a year after he is charged with Odin Lloyd's murder.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Aaron Hernandez please rise.

CANDIOTTI: Aaron Hernandez is indicted for the murders of those two young men.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: How do you plead this indictment?

HERNANDEZ: Not guilty.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The defendant leaned out of the driver's side window of the SUV with a loaded revolver in his hand extended out. The defendant immediately fired at least five rounds from a 38 caliber revolver into the victim's car.

CANDIOTTI: But why?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Daniel Abreu while dancing nearby accidentally bumped into the defendant causing the defendant's drink be spilled.

CANDIOTTI: The motive, prosecutor say, is nothing more than a spilled drink by a complete stranger.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The defendant told his friend that Mr. D. Abreu had deliberately bumped him and was quote "trying him."

CANDIOTTI: Court documents identify the friend with Hernandez that night as Alexander Bradley, the same Alexander Bradley who says Hernandez later shot out of his right eye because the football player felt disrespected during an argument over a cellphone.

All leading to a key question, do those two violent acts suggest a dangerous pattern of behavior driven by paranoia.

CNN has learned the prosecutors believe that behavior is what led to Odin Lloyd's murder. A source with knowledge of the investigation says the night they were at this club, Hernandez gets angry when he sees Lloyd talking with two men.

And angry again later at Hernandez's apartment when Lloyd gets to look at guns and ammo (ph) kept there. It's unclear exactly what took him off that night. The source will only say it's as trivial as that spilled drink allegedly behind the double murder.

GERRY LEONE, FORMER MASSACHUSETTS DISTRICT ATTORNEY AND FEDERAL PROSECUTOR: Motive does not have to be proven under the law.

CANDIOTTI: Gerry Leone is both a former Massachusetts district attorney and federal prosecutor.

LEONE: Juries like motive, juries want to know why someone did something especially when they've done something that's alleged to have been as heinous as this was.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The defendant was the one ...

CANDIOTTI: A motive, no matter how trivial would make the state's case stronger.

Prosecutors have already bolstered the case by upgrading the charges against codefendants Ortiz and Wallace to murder.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: How do you plead?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Not guilty.

MCCANN: Charging Carlos Ortiz and Ernest Wallace for murder really signals that this would be what's called a joint venture murder prosecution where anyone who actively participates in the murder can be held guilty for the murder.

CANDIOTTI: That would mean Hernandez could be convicted of murder even if prosecutors can't prove he fired the gun. But none of this makes the case rock solid, it still has holes.

MCCANN: There remains no murder weapon.

CANDIOTTI: Conviction without a gun is more difficult.

Still ahead, even a jail cell can't keep Aaron Hernandez from getting into more trouble. (COMMERCIAL BREAK)

CANDIOTTI: For Odin Lloyd's mother, Ursula Ward, everyday is a struggle.

URSULA WARD, ODIN LLOYD'S MOTHER: Hey handsome. Mommy is here to see you again. I love you. I miss you so much sweetie.

I never thought having talking to my son in the ground, you know.

CANDIOTTI: At every pre-trial hearing, she is surrounded by family hangs on every word.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Mr. Hernandez has right to a fair trial.

CANDIOTTI: But the justice she seeks is still a long way off. A trial date is penciled in for October, but it might start much later.

MCCANN: One possible timetable is that the Aaron Hernandez case for the murder of Odin Lloyd goes to trial sometime in the spring or summer of 2015.

CANDIOTTI: The fallen football star spends his days waiting alone in a seven-by-ten foot cell. Trying to keeping him inline is Sheriff Thomas Hodgson.

HODGSON: I've talked to him at night. There's a warmth within this person.

CANDIOTTI: What went wrong?

HODGSON: Learned behaviors in the environment that people grow up and have an incredible influence on who we become.

CANDIOTTI: Sheriff Thomas Hodgson believes in modifying behavior behind bars.

He says inmate number 1749.4 is reading the bible. And another book he suggested.

HODGSON: I got him reading (ph) "Tuesdays with Morrie."

CANDIOTTI: It examines how to create a centered meaningful life.

HODGSON: He was clearly moved by the book. He calls his mother and told her she did read it.

CANDIOTTI: The Sheriff tells Hernandez to find his center by turning to his childhood anchor, his late dad.

HODGSON: You've never be able to get back to that place that you've felt comfortable and safe and that's only going to happen if you go back. Talk to your father. Go back to your cell and talk to your father.

CANDIOTTI: What did he think about that advice? HODGSON: When I'd see him every so often, he just do it to ask you (ph). No, but I'm getting there. I think at this point is (ph) how to picture that he hidden out before, his dad's picture.

CANDIOTTI: A photograph of his late father in his cell.

KEVIN FAULK: It's not as bad now that I'm not playing.

CANDIOTTI: Retired patriot running back Kevin Faulk hasn't given up on his ex-teammate.

FAULK: I want to tell him that he has somebody on his side who's praying for.

CANDIOTTI: Prosecutors are saying that he orchestrated the execution of someone.

FAULK: They're not going to make me believe that he's a monster because you used those type of words.

CANDIOTTI: Not even two or more murder charges in the so called spilled drink case have changed Faulk's opinion of the player he knew.

FAULK: Get a question all the time. Do you think your boy did it? No, I don't want him to have done it, no. So, if you want me to say, no, no I don't think he did. At the same time, anybody can be pushed and do something drastically (ph) if they push you to that point.

CANDIOTTI: Even behind bars, trouble continues to follow Faulk's former teammate. After a trash-talk with another inmate, that man's lawyer says Hernandez got some punches in.

It got physical, isn't it?

HODGSON: There's no question it wasn't physical altercation (ph), absolutely.

CANDIOTTI: Hernandez is now charged with assault in that fight. That's on top of the three murder charges, a lawsuit claiming Hernandez shot a friend in the face three civil suits from the families of his alleged victims. And according to sources, a federal gun trafficking investigation asked for the Odin Lloyd case.

MCCANN: I think the Od's are likely that Aaron Hernandez will be convicted. Do I believe that it's a slam dunk? No.

CANDIOTTI: The ex patriot's lawyers contend the circumstantial evidence so far is full of gaps.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: There is certainly a lot of what I would call smoke. There is no doubt about it, but that's not a probable cause that he committed murder. And he can't just throw a bunch of stuff against the wall and say, "Well, that's good enough."

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: All right.

CANDIOTTI: Hernandez's lawyers and mother declined a request for an interview but predict he'll be cleared.

CHARLES RANKIN, HERNANDEZ ATTORNEY: We are confident that Aaron is going to be exonerated and that when witnesses have to testify that a jury of Aaron's peers will find that he is not guilty and it fact that no part in the killing of Odin Lloyd.

CANDIOTTI: However, an interesting twist mid-June, Hernandez's lawyers ask a judge to issue a subpoena for the New England Patriots. The defense wants medical records that quote, "May bear upon Hernandez's mental state at the time of Lloyd's murder." It's an indication his attorneys maybe considering what is called a diminished capacity defense. Arguing Hernandez is less capable of knowing right from wrong.

Days after what would have been Odin Lloyd's 28th birthday, family and friends come together for the unveiling of number 53's headstone.

WARD: I don't know if anything can really hear me right now. He was the love of my life.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: In loving memory of Odin Lloyd, our son, our brother, amen.

CANDIOTTI: Can you still talk to him?

DARYL SWEET, FRIEND OF ODIN LLOYD: Yeah.

CANDIOTTI: What do you say?

SWEET: My son. (Inaudible) my son.

HODGE: It doesn't matter what the outcome is we still lose at the end of the day even if you give justice. Do you really come out a winner? I don't think so.

CANDIOTTI Do you think there's a chance the Aaron Hernandez maybe found not guilty?

BRANCH: That's my biggest fear, because it always takes us one hero.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We love you Odin.