Aaron Hernandez judge threatens to ban TV station

ByABC News
April 9, 2015, 11:51 AM

— -- FALL RIVER, Mass. -- The judge in the murder trial of former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez said Thursday that a TV station would be banned from the courthouse unless someone from the station testifies under oath about what happened when a station worker allegedly followed two jurors.

The jurors told Superior Court Judge Susan Garsh on Thursday morning that they were followed by an SUV from Boston station WHDH-TV the previous day, their second day of deliberations.

Garsh said it was a serious matter and a felony and could have resulted in a mistrial. Currently there are 12 jurors and three alternates; a mistrial could be declared if the jury pool falls below 12 due to potential dismissals.

The station said in a statement that it "did not approach any juror or talk to any juror. We also did not videotape or take pictures of any juror.''

The judge gave the station until 12:15 p.m. to have the driver or a higher-up testify about what happened.

"I'd like the person in the van to tell me whether anyone in the company directed him,'' Garsh said.

If the driver wants to assert his Fifth Amendment right not to testify, "At a minimum I want someone from the company to say what investigation they've done,'' she said.

She said if that did not happen, she had no choice but to draw the inference that he was directed by the station to follow the jurors.

Garsh also banned the driver, who has not been identified, from being anywhere near the courthouse, and issued a written order that no one shall approach, follow, contact, harass, photograph or take down the license plates of jurors.

Hernandez is charged with the June 2013 shooting death of Odin Lloyd, who was dating his fiancée's sister.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.