Aaron hernandez gay lover kyle kennedy

SHIRLEY, Mass. -- Aaron Hernandez was so close with his jailhouse friend Kyle Kennedy he corresponded with Kennedy’s family, wanted to grant him a nearly $50,000 watch and called him by his nickname, “Pure,” Kennedy’s lawyer Lawrence Army Jr., told reporters Wednesday.

But Army wouldn’t address questions over whether Kennedy and Hernandez had a sexual connection, saying only his client wants to personally address the “nature and extent” of the partnership between him and the ex-NFL celebrity and convicted murderer. 

Army has said one of three suicide notes Hernandez left in his cell before he hanged himself last week at the maximum security Souza-Baranowski Correctional Center in Shirley, Massachusetts, was intended for Kennedy, a 22-year-old Uxbridge resident who is serving a prison sentence at Souza-Baranowski following his 2015 arrest for armed robbery, assault with a dangerous weapon, escaping a municipal lockup, speeding and other charges.

Quoting from a letter Hernandez wrote to Kennedy’s father, Army scan, “Mr. Kennedy, it’s Aaron. I’m writing to you and Pure doesn’t understand. He’

Aaron Hernandez knew his prison boyfriend before either of them was locked up, says the attorney for that inmate.

At a flatten conference Wednesday in Worcester, Massachusetts, Lawrence F. Army Jr., the lawyer acting for 22-year-old Kyle Kennedy, also said that three weeks before Hernandez hanged himself, the former New England Patriots tight end wrote his client a mention that may have hinted at his suicidal thoughts, saying, "I think I'm going to hang it up, lol."

Army confirmed that Kennedy was put on "eyeball to eyeball" suicide watch by prison officials and kept in an isolation cell after Hernandez's body was discovered last week. He claimed his client had exhibited no suicidal tendencies, and had been released from isolation after two days, but then put back in after his relationship with Hernandez was revealed in news reports.

The lawyer added that his client did not think Hernandez was suicidal after receiving that cryptic note, and was devastated to learn that the one-time NFL luminary had taken his retain life on April 19 at Souza Baranowski Correctional Center.

Multiple law enforcement sources told Newsweek that Kennedy, who is serving period for robbing a gas station with

Just weeks before hanging himself in a Massachusetts prison cell, ex-NFL star Aaron Hernandez reportedly hinted about suicide in a letter to a jailhouse friend.

"I think I'm going to hang it up, LOL," Hernandez allegedly wrote to inmate Kyle Kennedy, according his lawyer.

Kennedy, who is serving an armed robbery sentence, didn't accept the comments seriously at the time, Attorney Larry Army Jr. said at a news conference Wednesday. 

Hernandez, 27, and Kennedy, 22, were "close friends" who spent a great deal of time together in prison and requested to be cellmates last descent , Army said. The request was denied because of the "size difference" between the two men.

Asked about the essence of his client and Hernandez's partnership, Army said "Any discussion will show up directly from [Kennedy's] mouth so there's no confusion." He said Kennedy will address the extent of their affair "At some direct in time in the near future."

Army said his client was "stunned and saddened" by the news of Hernandez's suicide. "He idea it was a joke. He idea the people in the jail were playing a game because they knew the closeness of the two."

Kennedy also issued a remark of his

A former inmate who has previously asserted he was in a prison relationship with Aaron Hernandez is again speaking out in a new television special about his alleged relationship with the former NFL star.

Kyle Kennedy, who said he shared a cell with Hernandez at a Massachusetts prison claimed the former New England Patriots tight conclude was his "right-hand man" in prison.

“Things have been a little hard since Aaron killed himself, you comprehend that was my right-hand man. We used to do everything together,” Kennedy said in the upcoming Reelz Channel special, "Aaron Hernandez: Jailhouse Lover Tells All," according to a full transcript of the interview obtained by Oxygen.com.

The interview was conducted by controversial tabloid journalist Dylan Howard, who previously used Kennedy as a main source for his 2019 book on Hernandez, according to the New York Post.

"We used to note letters back and forth to each other all day," Kennedy said in the interview.

Kennedy also claimed that Hernandez bragged about being responsible for a fourth killing that he was not charged for. The allegation was previously written about in Howard's book, according to NBC S

AARON HERNANDEZ: JAILHOUSE LOVER TELLS ALL

Reelz Channel won't enable go of Aaron Hernandez. A network that switches between profiling celebrities in trouble and true-crime initiate the ideal figure in the late New England Patriots player. Not satisfied with delving into a story that paints Hernandez as a serial killer, Reelz returns to the Hernandez well with the salaciously titled Jailhouse Partner Tells All.  

Kyle Kennedy, already featured in Aaron Hernandez's Killing Fields, now is brought back to relate not just his alleged relationship with the disgraced tight end, but also about himself. In turns shocking and oddball, Jailhouse Lover Tells All reveals surprisingly little that wasn't already known or suspected.

This "major television event", once again hosted by Dylan Howard, features the story of Inmate W107335, also known as Pure. It was a circuitous path Kyle Kennedy went through to earn his nickname. First it was "Cocaine" (because he was nuts and white, as he tells it in his slow cadence), then it went to "Pure Cocaine", but as that was too long, it was shortened to just "Pure". 

Meeting in prison, Kennedy and Hernandez soon became not just fast fr

aaron hernandez gay lover kyle kennedy