Aaron Hernandez is scheduled to be arraigned in court Wednesday on two counts of first-degree murder stemming from a 2012 unsolved double homicide in Boston. Watch the live stream below at 2 p.m. ET.
Watch the live stream HERE and HERE.
Hernandez, who's currently being held without bail while awaiting trial for the murder of Odin Lloyd, is also facing two new murder charges. A grand jury indicted Hernandez on May 15 for the July 2012 drive-by killings of Safiro Furtado and Daniel de Abreu.
The arraignment on Wednesday is expected to be short. Hernandez will be formerly read the charges against him and enter a plea. A future trial date could be set.
According to a police affidavit written last year, authorities believe Hernandez may have been the shooter in the 2012 double murder. Investigators found the SUV believed to be used in the shootings at the home of Hernandez's uncle last summer while searching for evidence related to the murder of Lloyd.
In addition to the three murder charges, Hernandez is faces charges of assault and battery for his alleged role in a jailhouse brawl.
A grand jury indicted Hernandez on May 1 on charges of assault and battery, and threats to do bodily harm. The former NFL star allegedly committed the crimes while in jail awaiting trial for the murder of Lloyd.
The Bristol County District Attorney's office issued a press release:
"A Bristol County Grand Jury this afternoon indicted Aaron Hernandez on charges stemming from an alleged assault, which occurred inside the Bristol County House of Corrections in Dartmouth on February 25, 2014, and an alleged threat made inside the same facility on November 1, 2013."
Hernandez also faces two lawsuits. He's being sued by Ursala Ward, the mother of Lloyd, for the wrongful death of her son, and a former associate, Alexander Bradley, is suing Hernandez for allegedly shooting him in the eye outside a Florida club in February 2013.
Hernandez pleaded not guilty to the murder of Lloyd, and he pleaded the Fifth Amendment in response to the allegations in Bradley's lawsuit.