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O.J. Simpson To Be Arraigned Wednesday

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O.J. Simpson To Be Arraigned Wednesday

 Slideshow: The Troubled Life Of O.J. Simpson

Simpson's Controversial Life In South Florida
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LAS VEGAS (CBS4) ― O.J. Simpson's arraignment has been set for Wednesday, with a bail hearing to be held after that.

A judge ordered Simpson held without bail after he was arrested and booked Sunday on charges connected with what police described as a robbery at a Las Vegas hotel. If he's convicted, Simpson is looking at up to 30 years in prison. His lawyer says that will never happen and hopes to have Simpson released before Wednesday, adding that Simpson was "not guilty" of the charges.

Over the weekend, Simpson was arrested in Las Vegas and is facing multiple felony counts in connection with an alleged armed robbery of a collector involving the former football great's sports memorabilia.

Charges against Simpson include two counts of robbery with use of a deadly weapon, conspiracy to commit robbery, burglary with a deadly weapon, and two counts of assault with a deadly weapon and coercion, said Clark County District Attorney David Roger.

The district attorney says he expects Simpson to ultimately be charged with seven felonies and one gross misdemeanor.

A conviction on the most serious charge, robbery with use of a deadly weapon, could bring a sentence of three to 35 years for each count, he said.

"He is facing a lot of time," Roger said.

Simpson was transferred to a detention center for booking Sunday evening, Dillon said. Dillon said he did not know whether Simpson would be able to post bail and be released Sunday.

"He was very cooperative, there were no issues," Dillon said.

At least one other person has been arrested and police said Sunday that they were searching for four others in connection with the alleged armed robbery that occurred in a room inside the Palace Station casino-hotel on Thursday.

Police Lt. Clint Nichols said Simpson invoked his right to an attorney immediately after being arrested.

Simpson, who has lived in West Kendall since shortly after the 1997 wrongful death case which held him civilly liable for the deaths of his former wife Nicole and her friend, Ron Goldman, told reporters in Las Vegas he had traveled to the city to take part in a wedding, and was staying at the casino hotel where the memorabilia incident took place.

Simpson allegedly told police he was with some other people who were retrieving items that belonged to him. Simpson has said there were no guns involved and that he went to the room at the casino only to get stolen mementos that included his Hall of Fame certificate and a picture of the running back with J. Edgar Hoover.

But sports collector Bruce Fromong, who was there, remembers it a little differently.

"O.J. was the last person to come through the door," said Fromong.

He says O.J. didn't have a gun, but two other men with him did.

Simpson told The Associated Press on Saturday that he did not call the police to help reclaim the items because he has found the police unresponsive to him ever since his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ron Goldman, were killed in 1994.

"The police, since my trouble, have not worked out for me," he said, noting that whenever he has called the police "It just becomes a story about O.J."

The Heisman Trophy winner, ex-NFL star and former actor has been a tabloid staple in South Florida since his ex-wife and Goldman were killed in 1994, and he moved to Florida in part to take advantage of laws which protested certain assets like his home from judgments like the one wom by the Goldmans.

Simpson's Controversial Life In South Florida

As police continue their investigation of that crime, Walter Alexander, 46, of Arizona, was arrested Saturday night on two counts of robbery with a deadly weapon, two counts of assault with a deadly weapon, conspiracy to commit robbery and burglary with a deadly weapon.

He was released without bail on Saturday night, Dillon said.

Besides the two firearms, police said they seized other evidence during early morning searches of two residences, Lt. Clint Nichols said.

"It was evidence of a crime that was committed," Nichols said. "And I believe we recovered some clothing that the individual was wearing in the commission of the robbery."

Simpson said auction house owner Tom Riccio called him several weeks ago to say some collectors were selling some of his items. Riccio set up a meeting with collectors under the guise that he had a private collector interested in buying Simpson's items.

Simpson said he was accompanied by several men he met at a wedding cocktail party, and they took the collectibles.

Alfred Beardsley, one of the sports memorabilia collectors involved in the alleged robbery, has said he wants the case dropped and that he's "on O.J.'s side."

Nichols said police had a responsibility to investigate how the collectibles were taken, regardless of who they belong to.

"We don't believe that anybody was roughed up, but there were firearms involved in the commission of the robbery," he said.

(© 2007 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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