Delta Junction man charged with threatening to kill Alaska senators

A Delta Junction resident upset over the impeachment of former President Donald Trump, illegal immigration and the direction he thinks the country is headed is accused of threatening the lives of Alaska’s two U.S. senators in a series of profanity-laced voicemails that included saying he would hire an assassin to kill one.

“Your life is worth $5,000, that’s all it’s worth,” the message left at the office of Sen. Lisa Murkowski said. “And as you let in these terrorists, assassins, guess what? I’m going to use them. I’m going to hire them.”

Some of the voicemails left for Murkowski and Sen. Dan Sullivan were played in U.S. District Court in Fairbanks last Friday by assistant U.S. Attorney General Ryan Tansey during the first appearance for Jay Allen Johnson, 65, who was ordered held in custody until at least the preliminary hearing set for Oct. 19.

The hearing provided more details of the government’s case against Johnson, who is retired and moved to the rural community from Texas in 2019 with his wife, Catherine Pousson-Johnson. He had earlier ties to the Fairbanks area.

The caller was also upset that Murkowski voted to convict Trump in his January impeachment trial.

“Nobody in this state wanted you to impeach Trump,” the caller says. “Just resign and get the f--- gone.”

In another voicemail, the caller warned the senator’s staff if they didn’t quit, “We are coming for you.”

“The next insurrection, it will be an insurrection. Period,” the voicemail says.

Murkowski in a statement asked the court not to release Johnson on bail, especially because she was traveling to Alaska for work. “I’m concerned for my personal safety if he is not detained,” she said in the statement read by Tansey.

The government alleges that Johnson also left 13 voicemails for Sullivan over a five-month period, including one in which he warns Sullivan that he’s tired of politicians destroying the country.

He vowed to get out his .50 caliber firearm. “I will be having a GoFundMe page for the shells, and I’m coming with … with a (expletive) vengeance.”

In one voicemail, he claimed he was a veteran. But the Navy, Air Force and Army said they did not have information about Johnson in their ranks. The Marines were still checking.

In some of the voicemails to Sullivan’s office, the government alleges Johnson left his name and address.

In one voicemail, the caller vowed to use “illegals for target practice,” Tansey said.

After Johnson was arrested Oct. 4, authorities found seven guns in the home, which is illegal for Johnson to have because he’s a felon. He has had several drunken driving charges and one related weapons charge while he was intoxicated, a loaded pistol in a shoulder holster, Tansey said.

Johnson’s wife, Catherine Pousson-Johnson, testified on her husband’s behalf in trying to have him released, saying she would drive him the 100 miles to Fairbanks for court proceedings.

She detailed a series of recent surgeries he has had, including on his spine, knee and shoulder.

“He’s in pain right now. My husband is an old man, and he gets very angry listening to politics on the news,” she said before being asked by public defender Gary Colbath to restrict her comments.

Tansey later asked her if she was aware her husband was making threats against two U.S. senators.

“Who hasn’t?” she replied.

Against the advice of his lawyer, Johnson also made comments throughout the hearing.

“I’m just prepared to sit in prison the rest of my life, I guess,” he said at one point. “I’m a senior citizen and I am highly disabled and I will not be carrying out any of these threats.”

“I just apologize to everybody,” he later said.

Johnson has split his time between Alaska and Texas. In 2019, he appears to have moved from Tuscola, Texas, to Delta Junction.

Few people in Delta Junction, with a population of about 1,000 in town with another 4,000 or so in the surrounding area, know him, Mayor Lou Heinbockel said.

“I’ve lived here 50 years, and I’ve never heard of the name until I read it in the paper yesterday,” he said.

Johnson registered to vote in 2019 as a member of the Alaska Constitution Party, Tiffany Montemayor, a spokesperson for the Alaska Division of Elections, said in an email to The Associated Press.

It is not recognized as a party in the state, but it is a political group with about 680 members, she said.

 

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