A grand jury handed down a 15-count indictment today for Dharun Ravi, the former Rutgers student accused of livestreaming 18-year-old roommate Tyler Clementi's gay liaisons on the internet. The event preceded Clementi's suicide.

Ravi faces two counts of invasion of privacy; two counts of attempted invasion of privacy; two counts of second-degree bias crimes; two counts of third-degree bias crimes; three counts each of tampering with evidence, three counts of hindering his own apprehension; and one count of witness tampering. According to the prosecution, Ravi tried to dissuade witnesses from testifying and gave investigators misleading information.

Ravi's alleged co-conspirator, Molly Wei, has also been charged with invasion of privacy, but her case has not yet gone to a grand jury.

Prosecutor Bruce Kaplan referred to Ravi's victims as T.C. and M.B. The identity of Tyler's make-out partner has never been revealed. [Star-Ledger]

Previously:

How a College Kid Livestreamed His Roommate's Gay Encounter, Possibly Causing Suicide
Tyler Clementi's Parents Don't Want His Bullies Punished Harshly
The Tragic Story of Tyler Clementi, Rutgers' Webcam Voyeurism Victim
Is This Webcam Spying Victim Tyler Clementi's Last Call for Help?
What It's Like to Be a Gay Teen