CARSON CITY (KRON) — We’re awaiting O.J. Simpon’s parole board hearing to find out if he will be released from prison.

What to expect:

  • Simpson will appear (via video-conference from prison) in front of four parole board commissioners.
  • He’ll speak for 30 to 45 minutes. Then, the board members will leave to deliberate.
  • If the four parole board members do not unanimously agree, they’ll call two other commissioners to vote.

Live updates:

  • O.J. Simpson will be paroled after serving nine years in prison for a botched bid to retrieve sports memorabilia in Las Vegas.
  • A Nevada parole board decided Thursday that the 70-year-old former football, TV and movie star will be released in October after serving his minimum term for armed robbery and assault with a weapon.
  • Simpson responded emotionally, saying, “Thank you, thank you, thank you.”
  • Four parole commissioners in Carson City questioned Simpson by videoconference from the Lovelock Correctional Center in rural Nevada. He has been held there since he was convicted in 2008.
  • The conviction came 13 years to the day after he was acquitted of murder in 1995 in the deaths of his ex-wife and her friend in Los Angeles.
  • Simpson’s parole was granted
  • A Nevada parole board is getting ready to issue its decision on whether to grant O.J. Simpson release from prison.
  • Simpson was seated back in the parole hearing room at a Nevada prison Thursday, chatting and laughing with his attorney and others in the room apparently unaware the microphone is picking up his conversation.
  • The four commissioners who questioned Simpson by videoconference heard testimony from Simpson, his daughter and the victim in the armed robbery that put the former sports start in prison for nearly nine years.
  • The 70-year-old Simpson is asking four Nevada parole board members to release him in October. He has a good chance after they sided with him once before and because he’s kept a clean prison record.
  • A Nevada parole board is heading into deliberations on whether to grant O.J. Simpson release from prison.
  • The four commissioners who questioned Simpson by videoconference walked out of the room after hearing testimony from Simpson, his daughter and the victim in the armed robbery that put Simpson in prison for nearly nine years.
  • Connie Bisbee, chairwoman of the Nevada Board of Parole Commissioners, said it would take about 30 minutes to make a decision. It has to be unanimous.
  • Two other commissioners monitored the hearing and will weigh in if the other four don’t reach a unanimous decision.
  • One of the sports memorabilia dealers in the robbery that put O.J. Simpson in prison has told a Nevada parole board that the former sports star apologized to him and he accepted it.
  • Bruce Fromong says he and Simpson have been friends for almost 27 years and that Simpson is not a threat. He says Simpson’s nearly nine years behind bars is “way too long” and that it’s time for him to go home to his family and friends.
  • He said Simpson is a good man and made a mistake. Turning to Simpson, Fromong said that if Simpson was released: “Juice I’ll be here tomorrow for you.”
  • One of the sports memorabilia dealers who was robbed by O.J. Simpson has told a Nevada parole board that the former sports star was misled about what was going to be at a Las Vegas hotel for him to recover.
  • Bruce Fromong says he and Simpson have been friends for almost 27 years and that Simpson never “held a gun on me.”
  • Simpson’s lawyer, Malcolm Lavergne, said earlier that Fromong called his office and they talked about how Simpson had apologized and he had accepted it.
  • Simpson has spent more than eight years behind bars for armed robbery and assault with a weapon after trying to take back sports memorabilia in a budget hotel room in Las Vegas.
  • O.J. Simpson has told a Nevada parole board that he is sorry “that things turned out the way they did” and had no intent to commit a crime.
  • Simpson also says he will be “no problem” and would like to get back to family and friends. He says no one has represented his prison better than himself.
  • He says he would like to get back to his family and friends.
  • O.J. Simpson’s attorney says he has talked to the sports memorabilia that was robbed and that the two had made things right.
  • Malcolm Lavergne told a Nevada parole board that Bruce Fromong called his office and they talked about how Simpson had apologized and he had accepted it.
  • Fromong is a longtime friend of Simpson’s and would testify in favor of release before the board Thursday.
  • Simpson has spent nearly nine years behind bars for armed robbery and assault with a weapon after trying to take back sports memorabilia from Fromong and another collectibles dealer in a budget hotel room in Las Vegas.
  • O.J. Simpson’s lawyer has read a letter from his client to a Nevada lawmaker thanking him for providing educational materials to the prison where the former football star has been housed for nearly nine years.
  • Simpson wrote to state Assemblyman Ozzie Fumo, one of his former attorneys, that the education provided behind bars helped him learn new skills. The letter was read aloud Thursday at Simpson’s parole hearing.
  • He cited a computer course he took that would allow him to better communicate with his children and perhaps even do a webcast or blog in the future.
  • With her father looking on, Simpson’s daughter has tearfully told parole commissioners that her father’s choices were wrong, but he has been a perfect inmate.
  • Arnelle Simpson has asked a Nevada parole board to let her father come home.
  • The 70-year-old Simpson is asking four Nevada parole board members to release him in October. He has a good chance after they sided with him once before and because he’s kept a clean prison record.
  • Arnelle Simpson, O.J. Simpson’s oldest child, is speaking on behalf of the family at his parole hearing in Nevada, saying they just want him to come home.
  • She told the parole board Thursday that the family realizes he’s not perfect but has done the best he can. She says he didn’t make the right decision in 2008 when he tried to take back sports memorabilia in a budget hotel room in Las Vegas. He was convicted of armed robbery and has spent nearly nine years behind bars.
  • Arnelle Simpson says she knows her father is remorseful, and the family wants him home so they can move forward. She called her father her best friend and her rock.
  • A Nevada parole board says O.J. Simpson has requested to live in Florida if he is released from prison.
  • Simpson then said, laughing, “I could easily stay in Nevada but I don’t think you guys want me here.”
  • The chairwoman of the parole commissioner said, “No comment here.” Parole commissioners say he applied to live with family in Florida.
  • Simpson has spent more than eight years behind bars for armed robbery and assault with a weapon after trying to take back sports memorabilia in a budget hotel room in Las Vegas.
  • A Nevada parole official has told O.J. Simpson that the board has received hundreds of letters in support and opposition to his release from prison.
  • Parole Commissioner Susan Jackson said Thursday that the opposition letters requested the board take into account his 1995 acquittal on murder charges in the death of his wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman as well as a civil court decision that found him liable for the deaths.
  • But Jackson says the board would not take that into account. Simpson thanked the board.
  • O.J. Simpson has told a Nevada parole board that he has been humbled by his incarceration.
  • Simpson also said Thursday he’s never made any excuses during his years in prison, but he wishes he had not brought two “security” men along to the Las Vegas hotel room encounter that led to his conviction.
  • The 70-year-old Simpson is asking four Nevada parole board members to release him in October. He has a good chance after they sided with him once before and because he’s kept a clean prison record.
  • O.J. Simpson has told a Nevada parole board that he doesn’t think he has an alcohol problem but has acknowledged he had been drinking the day of the crime that has put him in prison for nearly nine years.
  • Simpson said Thursday that an alcohol program he has taken would be more valuable in keeping an eye on his children.
  • Simpson has spent more than eight years behind bars for armed robbery and assault with a weapon after trying to take back sports memorabilia in a budget hotel room in Las Vegas.
  • O.J. Simpson has told a Nevada parole board that he has often mediated conflict among inmates.
  • Simpson told the board Thursday that an alternative-to-violence course he took has been the most important lesson behind bars.
  • Simpson previously asked for leniency in 2013, saying he had tried to be a model prisoner. He won parole on some convictions but was left with four more years to serve.
  • O.J. Simpson has told a Nevada parole board he wasn’t aware that when he and others went to a Las Vegas hotel room to confront two sports memorabilia dealers that one of his companions pulled a gun.
  • Simpson told the board Thursday he only found out about the gun afterward. He has spent nearly nine years behind bars for armed robbery and assault with a weapon for the heist.
  • He says the men who went with him to the hotel room received a get-out-of-jail-free card when they told authorities that Simpson told them to do it.
  • Simpson says he apologized to the surviving memorabilia dealer, who was a friend, and that he accepted the apology.
  • Simpson says no one broke into Riccio’s room, they were let in
  • According to Simpson, Thomas Riccio, told him to bring security
  • Simpson says he remembers seeing his personal belongings of including photos of his kids, documents, and letters in the hotel room
  • Before going to retrieve his belongings, O.J. said he met with his mother, sister, and lawyer who told him to leave the room if asked
  • Simpson claims he was in Las Vegas for a wedding and his friends at the time told him his property was there
  • O.J. recounts the crime
  • Simpson begins answering questions from Commissioner Tony Corda
  • Simpson’s caseworker Marc  La Fleur, confirms his parole eligibility date Oct.1 2017
  • Connie Bisbee questions Simpson
  • Simpson enters courtroom with Officer Francisco Bautista Simpson wearing standard-issue blue jeans, light blue button-down shirt, white T-shirt and white sneakers
  • The uniformed officer in the room is Correctional Officer Francisco Bautista
  • Arnelle Simpson its right of Shirley Baker, her left-hand holds Shirley’s right hand.
  • Commissioners set to enter the courtroom at 9:59 a.m.
  • Simpson’s family, friends, and victim have entered the courtroom.
  • Simpson will sit at a plain wooden table with a podium court bench behind him
  • His lawyer, Malcolm LaVergne will sit next to him