EXCLUSIVE: NFL murderer Aaron Hernandez's $1.3 million house and Hummer will be sold to pay compensation to mother of the friend he gunned down

  •  $1.3 million home in North Attleborough, Mass, will be sold along with the black Hummer he drove 
  • The home has five bedrooms, six bathrooms covers 7,100 square feet, and has a pool out back
  • His Hummer H2 is valued at $30,000 and proceeds from its sale will go towards his victim Odin Lloyd's family
  • Hernandez is serving life without parole for the murder and faces a new double murder trial later this year over a drive-by shooting 

Aaron Hernandez's $1.3 million home and his Hummer will be sold to satisfy a civil case brought by the man he murdered, a judge has ruled.

A Massachusetts court said the former New England Patriots tight end has to meet the compensation claim brought by the family of Odin Lloyd 

Hernandez was famously led out of that mansion at 22 Ronald C. Meyer Drive in North Attleborough with a white T-shirt pulled over shoulders, the hands that caught passes from now four-time Super Bowl champion Tom Brady cuffed behind his back in June 2013, days after the bullet-riddled body of his friend Odin Lloyd was found in a pool of blood in an industrial park less than a mile away.

Hernandez was convicted of first-degree murder in connection with Lloyd’s execution-style slaying in April, prompting a civil suit from the victim’s mother, Ursula Ward. He is serving life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Hand it over: Prisoner for life Arron Hernandez has been told his house and his Hummer will be sold  

Hand it over: Prisoner for life Arron Hernandez has been told his house and his Hummer will be sold  

Stately: Before his arrest, Hernandez lived in a $1.2million home in North Attleborough, Massachusetts. It is being sold to meet the civil suit brought in the wake of Odin Lloyd's murder

Stately: Before his arrest, Hernandez lived in a $1.2million home in North Attleborough, Massachusetts. It is being sold to meet the civil suit brought in the wake of Odin Lloyd's murder

Victim: Odin Lloyd, who was murdered by Aaron Hernandez, resulting in the New England Patriots star receiving a whole-life sentence 

Victim: Odin Lloyd, who was murdered by Aaron Hernandez, resulting in the New England Patriots star receiving a whole-life sentence 

Today a judge approved a joint order that would allow the sale of the house and Hernandez’s Hummer with the proceeds to be distributed to Ward. 

During the investigation the Patriots, who Hernandez had played as a tight end for, voided his multi-million dollar salary, and lost $250,000 destroying jerseys bearing his name. 

Late last month the Daily Mail reported Hernandez was written up and transferred to a high security cell by officials at the MCI-Shirley’s Souza Baranowski Correctional Center after he was allegedly caught smoking in the prison yard – a violation of rules.

The incident was the second for the one-time NFL standout who was arrested shortly after he signed a contract with the New England Patriots worth about $40 million.

In May, a month after he began his life sentence, Hernandez was sent to a segregation unit after he was accused of acting as a lookout for what a source called a 'two on one fight' that was categorized as gang-related.

That same week he was photographed at a court appearance sporting new prison ink, including a Bloods tattoo on his hand and the word 'Lifetime' tattooed across his neck.

Hernandez is expected to go on trial in connection with a separate double murder charge in Suffolk County in December. 

Prosecutors said Hernandez was the gunman who opened fire on a car in Boston's South End in July 2012 leaving two men dead and another man wounded. 

That drive-by shooting went unsolved until after Hernandez was arrested in 2013 for the killing of Odin Lloyd.

On sale too: The 2005 H2 Hummer which belonged to Hernandez was part of the trial when the judge ruled it was not evidence. It was spotted on sale in May. Proceeds from the sale will now go to the civil suit against the NFL murderer

On sale too: The 2005 H2 Hummer which belonged to Hernandez was part of the trial when the judge ruled it was not evidence. It was spotted on sale in May. Proceeds from the sale will now go to the civil suit against the NFL murderer

Home from home:  MCI-Shirley’s Souza Baranowski Correctional Center is now where the high-profile prisoner is being held

Home from home:  MCI-Shirley’s Souza Baranowski Correctional Center is now where the high-profile prisoner is being held

The former No 81 is now Prisoner W106228. His trial has been followed by other litigation, including the compensation case, and his fiancée asking a Rhode Island court if she can add his surname to hers.

Shayanna Jenkins, who was seen wearing a gold wedding band and diamond engagement ring, wants to add 'Hernandez' onto her surname to match her daughter's name.

Despite wearing a wedding ring, a prison spokesman told The Associated Press there is no record that Hernandez got married, or requested a wedding ceremony.

According to The Providence Journal, Jenkins appeared on Monday in the North Providence Provate Court asking to change her surname to Jenkins-Hernandez, like her daughter Avielle.

The judge said she needed more information before granting the request. Jenkins had previously had perjury charges against her dismissed.

His home, valued at $1.3 million, is a five-bedroom, six-bathroom property arranged over 7,100 square feet.

The Hummer has also emerged in public, being spotted on sale in the lot of a car dealership in the town of Wrentham, Mass, in May.

Devoted: Shayanna Jenkins, the fiancee of convicted murderer Aaron Hernandez, has been spotted wearing a wedding ring and has asked a court to change her name to Jenkins-Hernandez like the couple's daughter

Devoted: Shayanna Jenkins, the fiancee of convicted murderer Aaron Hernandez, has been spotted wearing a wedding ring and has asked a court to change her name to Jenkins-Hernandez like the couple's daughter

The black SUV, estimated to be worth $30,000, was found sitting on the forecourt of Central Motor Sales.

The 2005 vehicle, an H2 Luxury model, had been seized by police, but was given back to Hernandez after a judge decided it couldn't be admitted as evidence in his murder trial.

For a brief time the vehicle took center stage in the murder investigation, after officer were granted a warrant to search the vehicle, and found a gun magazine containing .45-caliber bullets inside.

The type of ammunition matched that found on Lloyd's body, which helped establish Hernandez as his attacker. 

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