New revelations have surfaced in the unfortunate suicide of Aaron Hernandez.

TMZ has broken the news that the three notes recovered from the late, former New England Patriot's tight end were not for a gay lover as rumored before. Each letter was reportedly written to his fiancee Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez, his four-year-old daughter Avielle, and his attorney, Jose Baez.

The contents of what Hernandez wrote is currently being kept confidential, but TMZ reports, "sources familiar with the investigation tell us the ex-NFL player did not leave any sort of a message for another inmate."

Baez shot down the rumors of Hernandez having a relationship in prison with a gay male when he said, "These are malicious leaks used to tarnish somebody who is dead."

Baez, Hernandez's attorney also blames the rumors on a man named Kyle Kennedy and sends a stern warning individuals who continues to spread them.

"Notwithstanding my unambiguous statement that there were no such letters, representatives, on behalf of an individual named Kyle Kennedy, continues to advise the media such a gay love letter exists," Baez said. "Accordingly, on behalf of the family of Aaron Hernandez, I am reaffirming, unequivocally, no such letter to Mr. Kennedy, or any other individual, in or out of prison, exists. l urge anyone continuing to spread these malicious untruths to cease immediately."

Each of the letters, especially the third one, remain a hot topic of controversy due to the hidden nature of the content and the coded language. CBS Sports have also reported that the Worcester County District Attorney's Office will not confirm the addressee of the third letter, although it has been confirmed that the first two are for Jenkins and the daughter.

"The information I have is unclear," said a spokesperson for the D.A.'s office.

Larry Army, Kennedy's attorney, says he believes that Hernandez wrote the letter in prison code.

"I was told by a source that the letter and parts of the letter didn't make a lot of sense," Army said. "When I explained that to my client he said there's a language that's spoken and in written form in a prison that is made that way so that it appears incoherent and so that others don't understand what the meaning is."

Baez reportedly does not have access to those letters and a judge in Massachusetts ruled that the police would have to hand Hernandez's letters to Jenkins.

Source: tmz.com