Johnny Manziel at Justin Bieber concert

Johnny Manziel attended the Justin Bieber concert with Joe Haden on the night he's indicted.

(Instagram/Sarah Haden)

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Johnny Manziel attended Justin Bieber's concert here with his former Browns teammate and good pal Joe Haden on Tuesday night after being indicted.

Manziel, who was indicted by a Dallas County grand jury for a misdemeanor domestic assault charge against his ex-girlfriend Colleen Crowley, was back in Cleveland to attend the concert of his pal Bieber, who hosted Manziel, Floyd Mayweather and others at his Beverly Hills home in the summer of 2014.

Manziel attended the show at Quicken Loans Arena with Haden, Haden's wife Sarah and at least one other friend.

Sarah posted a photo on Instagram of the group at the concert with the caption: "Bieber concert with the boys!"

The post received 1,000 likes in a few hours before she deleted it.

Bieber's crew also tweeted a photo of Beiber, Manziel and Haden at the show.

Haden, who's represented by Manziel's former agent Drew Rosenhaus, has been close to Manziel since his rookie season. Haden and his wife Sarah have been supportive of Manziel through this trip to rehab last offseason and his subsequent struggles. Sarah also has previous photos of herself with Crowley on her Instagram account before Manziel and Crowley broke up in December.

On Feb. 3, Crowley obtained a two-year protective order against Manziel, stipulating he must stay away from her for two years.

In a sworn affidavit, she accused Manziel of striking her so hard that she lost hearing in one ear.

"He hit me with his open hand on my left ear for jumping out of the car," Crowley wrote in the affidavit. "I realized immediately that I could not hear out of that ear."

She also claims that Manziel, who was waived by the Browns last month and is currently out of football, threatened to kill both of them if she did not cooperate.

In addition to the criminal charges, Manziel is facing a likely suspension from the NFL under its personal conduct policy -- regardless of whether or not he's convicted. The NFL investigated Manziel for his October roadway argument with Crowley and didn't find enough evidence to suspend him.

Even if he signs with the another team, his tenure will likely begin with a suspension of some sort, possibly four games or more.

Manziel's lead attorney, Jim Darnell of El Paso, Texas, says Manziel will plead not guilty and is confident he'll be found innocent.

"We certainly respect the decision of the grand jury but of course they only hear part of the case: What the D.A. chooses to share with them,'' he said in a statement sent to cleveland.com and other outlets. "We don't know what that was. This case will now be assigned to a court in Dallas County where the parties are able to join the issue.

"Johnny will certainly plead "not guilty" and we believe the evidence will support that plea. Out of respect for Ms. Crowley, we will not try the case in the press. We do, however, believe that Johnny will be acquitted at the conclusion of the case."