The late Aaron Herandez's fiancee, Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez, is accused of misusing her daughter's trust fund. REUTERS Aaron Hernandez left a trust fund for the daughter he shares Read: What Aaron Hernandez's Suicide Note To Fiancee Shayanna Jenkins Said After a request was made by the AP, Worcester District Attorney Joseph Early Jr. released the death report on Friday. In September, Shayanna-Jenkins requested $10,000 for Avielle’s dance lessons from a trust set up in the 10-year-old girl’s name. The independent third party trustee who oversees the fund denied the request, arguing that Jenkins-Hernandez should have enough money to cover the cost. Between the summers of 2012 and 2013, not long after Hernandez made his first Pro Bowl, he was linked to a series of violent incidents culminating in the death of Odin Lloyd, a semi-pro football player who dated the sister of Hernandez's fiancĂ©e, Shayanna Jenkins. First published on Wed 15 Apr 2015 10.24 EDT. Former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez has been found guilty of the murder of his friend Odin Lloyd, who was shot dead near the player Hernandez’s fiancee Shayanna Jenkins now faces life without Hernandez. RELATED: AARON HERNANDEZ ON SUICIDE WATCH: REPORT From this point on, hard work will be required for all involved. Shayanna Jenkins is an American tv personality from Bristol, Connecticut, who became famous after becoming the fiancĂ©e of the former NFL player Aaron Hernandez. Aaron Hernandez was convicted for the murder of semi-professional NLF player Odin Lloyd and was sentenced to life imprisonment. On 12 April, Aaron committed suicide hanging himself A grand jury indicted Shayanna Jenkins, the fiancee of Aaron Hernandez, on a single count in relation to the investigation into the killing of Odin Lloyd. It wasn't clear what led to the charge Thirteen months after former football star Aaron Hernandez hanged himself in prison, his fiancĂ©e, Shayanna Jenkins, announced that she’s expecting her second child. “Many of you have had Shayanna Jenkins, an American TV personality, rose to fame after engaging with Aron Hernandez. Hernandez has encountered several legal issues during his professional career. He was sentenced to life imprisonment after being charged guilty of the murder of Odin Lloyd and later committed suicide in April 2017. UWXYuV. photo credit: Jared Wickerham / Getty Images Shayanna Jenkins, Aaron Hernandez’s former fiancee, is speaking out for the first time following the release of Netflix documentary series Killer Inside: The Mind of Aaron Hernandez. The docu-series had the world talking, as It detailed the life of the late Aaron Hernandez. One thing that caught most viewers by surprise is the claims made about Hernandez’s sexuality. The series claims Hernandez had a sexual/intimate relationship with a man. Shayanna Jenkins, spoke to Good Morning America on Wednesday and addressed the claims. She said, “You can’t describe someone’s sexuality without them being here,” she said. “Although I’ve had a child with Aaron, I still can’t tell you what he was feeling inside.” She also explains she wished the late football player would’ve been honest with her, “If he did feel that way, or if he felt the urge, I wish that I was told,” Jenkins said. “I wish that he would have told me because I wouldn’t have loved him any differently. I would have understood. It’s not shameful.” The docu-series also takes a look into an alleged murder that Hernandez was convicted of. The former New England Patriot, hung himself in prison. Jenkins makes it clear that she believes he was innocent. Since the trial of Aaron Hernandez for the murder of Odin Lloyd began in January, it has been repeatedly suggested to jurors that Hernandez’s love of smoking marijuana helps to explain his innocence. Hernandez smoked marijuana, which is legal in Massachusetts for medicinal purposes but illegal for recreational uses, on a daily basis. According to Hernandez’s attorneys, Lloyd was instrumental in satisfying Hernandez’s craving for marijuana. Lloyd was Hernandez’s so-called “blunt master” in supplying marijuana and skillfully rolled joints. Two nights before Lloyd’s death, the two men—who were connected through their romantic relationships with sisters Shayanna Jenkins and Shaneah Jenkins—smoked marijuana together at Hernandez’s “flop house” in Franklin (Mass.). The defense’s basic theory is that Hernandez not only had no reason to kill Lloyd but that Hernandez had every incentive to protect his blunt master. Shayanna Jenkins testifies in dramatic day at Aaron Hernandez trial On Monday, Hernandez’s legal team once again nudged jurors to conclude that marijuana helps to explain Hernandez’s innocence. In answering questions from Hernandez attorney Charles Rankin, Shayanna Jenkins testified that a mysterious cardboard box that she hastily—and covertly—removed from Hernandez’s home a day after Lloyd’s death “smelled skunky...it smelled like marijuana.” Jenkins, who began her testimony last Friday, also testified that Bristol County (Mass.) prosecutors had not previously asked her about the smell of the box at the time she picked it up in a storage room in Hernandez’s it have been merely marijuana in the box?Viewed from a light most favorable to Hernandez, it would have been logical for Hernandez to want marijuana removed from his home and for the removal to happen quickly and COVERAGE: Opening statements | Day 31 | Day 32 | Day 33Consider the circumstances at this time. Police had already searched the exterior of Hernandez’s home and it was only a matter of time before they would obtain a warrant to search the home’s interior. If officers discovered marijuana in the home, they could have arrested Hernandez and charged him with possession of more than one ounce of marijuana. That charge, if proven, would have carried a penalty of up to six months in jail. If officers found substantial amounts of marijuana plus financial records suggesting drug deals might have been conducted in Hernandez’s home, Hernandez could have also been charged with the illegal sale of marijuana. This more significant charge would have carried a penalty of up to two years in prison. Worse yet for Hernandez, if officers found more than 50 pounds of marijuana in his home, Hernandez (in theory) could have been charged with trafficking, which if proven would have carried a sentence of up to 15 years in wasn't only the courts that Hernandez had to fear when it came to marijuana. He also needed to worry about Bill Belichick and Roger Goodell. Had Hernandez been arrested for illegal drugs, he would have faced adverse consequences at the hands of his employer, the New England Patriots, and the National Football League. From this lens, Jenkins’s testimony about smelling marijuana from the box would make sense, as would the need to remove the marijuana from the home before the cops it is thus plausible that the box might have only contained marijuana, Bristol county prosecutor William McCauley, who helped to arrange for Jenkins to testify with immunity, did not seem to believe Jenkins during this portion of her testimony. Jurors might feel similarly, as explained below. Prosecutors contend that the box instead contained the .45-caliber Glock pistol used to murder Lloyd in an industrial park located approximately a mile from Hernandez’s home. Jenkins’s testimony did not preclude the possibility that the box contained the gun—it’s possible the box contained marijuana and a firearm—but it certainly did not advance the prosecution’s theory about the box’s down Jenkins’s recollection of removing and discarding the boxJenkins on Monday admitted that Hernandez had instructed her by phone that it was “important” she get the box out of the house and that she do so without others noticing. She then testified about how she followed Hernandez’s instructions. Jenkins’s explanation likely left many questions for jurors about her believability and Jenkins told it, she retrieved a trash bag from the kitchen and used the bag to carry the box out of the home in a concealed manner. Jenkins also testified that she placed baby clothes over the box. The baby clothes, Jenkins explained, were to ensure “nothing was exposed,” although she curiously added ““I wasn’t necessarily hiding [the box] from certain individuals.” Jurors watched surveillance video taken from Hernandez’s home security system of Jenkins during this sequence. At one point, the video displays Jenkins walking by her sister, Shaneah, who dated Lloyd and was in Hernandez’s home for support as she grieved Lloyd’s likely questioned the truthfulness of Jenkins’s account when she asserted that Hernandez never told her what was inside the box. They probably also found dubious Jenkins’s explanation that she neither asked Hernandez about the box’s contents nor did she attempt to look inside. While it’s plausible that Jenkins would not look inside the box—Jenkins, after all, had no legal duty to look inside—it constituted an unlikely reaction. This is especially so given what had already occurred by this point in time: Jenkins had asked Hernandez if he had killed Lloyd (Hernandez responded he had not). It would seem peculiar that Jenkins, whose questioning of Hernandez suggested she had imagined a possible link between Lloyd’s death and Hernandez, would not peek inside the mysterious box that Hernandez urgently wanted out of the moreover, delivered inconsistent testimony about the weight of the box. She told McCauley on Monday the box weighed between 35 and 40 pounds, but in 2013 Jenkins told grand jurors it weighed about 25 pounds. Either weight would have constituted a substantial amount of marijuana, particularly for a user of marijuana rather than a dealer. Of course, it’s possible the box might have also contained such marijuana paraphernalia as a bong or pipe. Nevertheless, between Jenkins appearing completely incurious about what was inside the box and the box’s suspicious weight, jurors might struggle to believe might also be scratching their heads in regards to Jenkins’s testimony about how she discarded of the box. She testified that she borrowed her sister’s car and then “drove around” nearby towns for a while before finding a dumpster to discard the box. She didn’t recall the location of the dumpster, attributing the aimlessness of her journey to “nerves” and the need to “play a neutral role” between “trying to comfort” her sister and—though Jenkins did not directly say it—looking out for her fiancé’s best interests. One of the towns she drove through was Foxboro (Mass), where the Patriots play their games in Gillette Stadium. Jenkins then returned home from the mysterious dumpster, parked the car in Hernandez’s driveway and brought the baby clothes back to ContinueSI RecommendsPerhaps Jenkins’s least believable statement occurred when she testified that she didn’t recall ever speaking to Hernandez again about the box—even to confirm that it had been discarded. For jurors who were told that Hernandez stressed to Jenkins the importance of the box’s removal, they are likely wondering why Jenkins didn’t verify to Hernandez that the box was gone for Memory?While Jenkins seemed foggy about what took place with the box, she exhibited precision in recalling most other pieces of information. For instance, Jenkins told jurors about her history with Hernandez, whom she had met as a classmate while in elementary school. Jenkins elaborated on how their relationship evolved from a friendship in elementary and middle school into an intimate relationship while in high school. Jenkins later testified in detail about various home improvements, including the addition of a personalized Patriots pool table and an enhanced exercise room. She even recalled the individual who had installed the home theater in Hernandez’s home and at what time the installation occurred. Further, Jenkins demonstrated a clear memory in remembering positive experiences in the weekend preceding Lloyd’s death on Monday, June 17, 2013. These experiences included having breakfast with Hernandez’s mother, going out to dinner at Longhorn Steakhouse with Hernandez and their daughter and planning a picnic for her contrast in detail and recollection between Jenkins’s testimony about the box and her testimony about most other topics was striking. The fact that Jenkins spoke eloquently and fluidly about those other topics while struggling to talk about the box only accentuated this contrast. Unfortunately for Jenkins—and Hernandez—the contrast could lead some jurors to find her lack of memories about what took place hours after Lloyd’s murder to be more suggestive of an unwillingness to implicate Hernandez than a willingness to truthfully portrays Hernandez as unfaithful in their relationshipOne of the more moving sequences in Monday’s testimony occurred when Jenkins spoke about difficulties in her relationship with Hernandez. Jenkins acknowledged that Hernandez was unfaithful. She also described how her relationship with him “was worth fighting for” even if it required “compromising” and accepting infidelity. She added that she and Hernandez had planned to wed on April 12, 2014 in California. Shayanna Jenkins's testimony will be vital in Hernandez murder trial Jenkins’s testimony about Hernandez cheating on her could hurt and help Hernandez’s case in the eyes of the 15 jurors, 10 of whom are women. From a negative standpoint, Hernandez cheating on his fiancĂ©e and the mother of his infant daughter reflects poorly on his moral compass. Jurors have already heard that Hernandez tried to kiss the babysitter, Jennifer Fortier, at his flop house and dance with a woman, Kasey Arma, at the Rumor Nightclub in Boston. Now they have heard from Hernandez’s fiancĂ©e that Hernandez may have often been a womanizer. To be clear, character evidence is inadmissible in a trial unless the defendant makes his character an issue. But prosecutors often try to “indirectly” get in character evidence. Hernandez being unfaithful doesn’t make him any more likely to have murdered Lloyd, but Hernandez’s attorneys do not want jurors to dislike or resent him—especially if they ultimately find his guilt or innocence to be a close the other hand, Jenkins portraying Hernandez as a womanizer suggests she had reasons to leave him and fewer reasons to lie on his behalf in this trial. This makes her testimony supporting Hernandez arguably more believable. Jenkins describes Lloyd and Hernandez as close and friendlyIn addition to her crucial testimony about a marijuana odor emanating from the bag, Jenkins advanced Hernandez’s defense by describing a close bond between Hernandez and Lloyd. She detailed the first time Hernandez met Lloyd, which occurred at Hernandez’s home after a preseason Patriots game in August, 2012. Thereafter, Lloyd and Shaneah Jenkins would occasionally stay over Hernandez’s home. Hernandez and Lloyd, Shayanna Jenkins explained, would smoke marijuana in Hernandez’s “man cave.” She did not speak about any hostility between the men, instead describing them as friends and marijuana in mind, the prosecution is expected to rest its case by next week. Although motive is not a required element for a murder conviction, jurors typically want an explanation as to why the defendant would have intentionally tried to kill the victim (or, though joint venture, shared the intent to see the killing occur). Prosecutors have yet to establish a clear reason why Hernandez would have wanted Lloyd murdered. Jenkins’s testimony on Monday did not help the prosecution in this describes Carlos Ortiz as an outsider: possible preview of the defenseIn a potential preview of Aaron Hernandez’s forthcoming case-in-chief, Jenkins framed co-defendant Carlos Ortiz as something of an outsider in the group. She mentioned that while she knew co-defendant Ernest Wallace, she knew very little about Ortiz, who was at her house the night of Lloyd’s claimed she had only met Ortiz once before, and it was at an inn in Newport ( Rankin tried to pounce on this testimony, asking Jenkins “Would it be fair to say that [Ortiz] tagged along [spouse of Hernandez cousin] Singleton” when they met at the inn. McCauley objected to the question and Judge Susan Garsh sustained, but to me it was a telling exchange. Ortiz—who along with Wallace will face separate trials—has reportedly tried to cooperate with prosecutors but has been deemed non-credible. Wallace, in contrast, supposedly remains close to Hernandez, who some reports suggest is paying Wallace’s legal fees. If Hernandez were to try to blame Lloyd’s death on someone else, there’s an excellent chance that person is Ortiz. Stay McCann is a Massachusetts attorney and the founding director of the Sports and Entertainment Law Institute at the University of New Hampshire School of Law. He is also the distinguished visiting Hall of Fame Professor of Law at Mississippi College School of Law. El dĂ­a de hoy, 15 de Enero, finalmente llega a Netflix el tan esperado documental del ex-jugador de New England Patriots, Aaron HernĂĄndez, quien se quitĂł la vida tras haber sido condenado a prisiĂłn despuĂ©s de asesinar a Odin Lloyd, tambiĂ©n jugador de la NFL y novio de la hermana de la prometida de Aaron, Shayanna la llegada de ‘Killer Inside: The Mind of Aaron Hernandez’ a la plataforma digital, ha comenzado a surgir la gran incĂłgnita entre los seguidores del fallecido jugador de la NFL. ÂżQuĂ© fue de Shayanna Jenkins, la prometida y madre del hijo del ala cerrada, despuĂ©s de que Ă©ste se quitĂł la vida?Sin duda, la noticia del suicidio del jugador de descendencia latina conmoviĂł a mĂĄs de uno, especialmente a Shayanna, quien se encontraba comprometida con Ă©ste y tras su muerte, poco a poco fue olvidada por los medios. Sin embargo, Jenkins jamĂĄs olvidĂł a Hernandez, pues, constantemente sube publicaciones a su cuenta oficial de Instagram en donde recuerda a su fallecida hecho, el dĂ­a de ayer, tras el anuncio de la llegada del documental a Netflix, Shayanna Jenkins HernĂĄndez, subiĂł una imagen con un emotivo mensaje, el cual, muchos señalan es resultado de su afecto a Aaron. La imagen dice lo siguiente: "Nunca olvides quĂ© tan lejos has llegado, todo por lo que has pasado. Todas las veces que te has impulsado, incluso cuando pensaste que ya no podĂ­as mĂĄs. Todas las veces que te levantaste de la cama sin saber cĂłmo hacerlo. Las veces que pensaste en rendirte pero llegaste al dĂ­a siguiente. Nunca olvides cuĂĄnta fuerza has desarrollado a lo largo del camino.”Una vez que Aaron falleciĂł, Shayanna hizo todo el procedimiento legal para poder llevar el apellido del jugador: 'Shayanna Jenkins HernĂĄndez', ya que, debido a las circunstancias, Ă©stos nunca pudieron llegar a casarse.ÂżShayanna Jenkins estarĂĄ en el documental de Netflix?Se especula que la prometida del jugador haga una apariciĂłn en el documental, pues Ă©ste contarĂĄ con diversas entrevistas a personas cercanas a Hernandez. Entre dichas personalidades, se encuentran los detectives Michelle Wood y Bo Dietl, el investigador Sargent Don Jackson, asĂ­ como Urban Meyer, su coach en igual manera, se hablarĂĄ del impacto de la muerte del jugador, por lo que, se estima que sea aquĂ­ cuando Shayanna Jenkins haga una fuerte participaciĂłn.