Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains the image of an Indigenous person who has died, used with the permission of her family.The man charged with the murder of Kumanjayi Little Baby will face court for the first time this morning, with the hearing marking the first time a Northern Territory criminal proceeding is live-streamed to the public.Jefferson Lewis, 47, was arrested on Saturday after the five-year-old girl went missing from an Alice Springs town camp last month, sparking a five-day search.Mr Lewis is facing one count of murder and two other charges that cannot be published for legal reasons, and will appear in the Alice Springs Local Court via audio-visual link after 9:30am.The NT Courts social media account has published a link to the live-stream online due to the high level of interest in the case, which can be accessed here.Dozens of Alice Springs residents joined police and emergency services in the search for the little girl before her body was found on April 30, about 5 kilometres south of where she was last seen.In announcing the charges on Sunday, NT Police Commissioner Martin Dole said detectives had been working "around the clock" since Mr Lewis's arrest."This remains a deeply distressing matter, and our thoughts are firmly with Kumanjayi's family, loved ones and the wider community that have been deeply impacted by these events," he said.Kumanjayi's kinship grandfather told the ABC his family was in "sorry business" and urged the community to "let the justice system do its work"."It is time now for sorry business, to show respect for our family and have space for grieving and remembering," he said last week.