OAKLAND — After deliberating for just a couple of hours, a jury found Francisco Hernandez Sr. guilty of killing two people, and the attempted murder of a third man whom he shot and then set on fire.

The jury of eight women and four men received the case Tuesday afternoon, although jurors didn’t begin deliberation until early Wednesday. After two hours, they returned a verdict — guilty on all charges.

Hernandez, 40, is accused of being a “cold-blooded killer” after he and his son got angry at a group of men for doing doughnuts in their truck. Father and son were accused of grabbing their guns, shooting the three men, dousing their truck with gasoline and setting it on fire with the men inside.

Juan Ramos and Alfonso Ibanez Jr. were killed on Aug. 8, 2016, around 1:45 a.m. at Empire and Gibraltar roads in East Oakland. The third man, who had the “hellacious experience” of being burned alive, shot and beaten — miraculously survived.

The jury found Hernandez guilty of two counts of first-degree murder, attempted murder, attempted arson and the special circumstances of multiple murders, among other enhancements. He faces life in prison without the possibility of parole.

“You now know just how much blood this man has on his hands,” said Alameda County Deputy District Attorney Stacie Pettigrew during her closing arguments to the jury Tuesday.

The third man testified during the two-week long trial that he had been shot four times, beaten and then burned. He managed to escape, took off his burning clothes and hid in an empty lot until police arrived.

During the attack, Hernandez Sr. said to him, “You came with them, you’re going to leave with them,” the man said.

Once he was forced back inside the truck, it began to burn. Alongside him were his two friends: Ramos, who had died right away, and Ibanez, who was still alive and convulsing in the last moments of his life, the victim said.

The older Hernandez turned to his teenage son and told him, “You know what you have to do,” the man testified. After the truck was on fire, the two Hernandezes said something to the effect of, “Look, he’s burning” and were laughing at him, he said.

Hernandez Sr. is expected to be sentenced on January 10. His son took a plea deal, pleading to one count of willful, premeditated and deliberate attempted murder. He is expected to receive 17 years to life in prison when he is sentenced Nov. 15.