Las Vegas Review-Journal

Judge finds probable cause

Grand jury to get case of Alaska man threatenin­g to kill senators

- By Mark Thiessen

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — A magistrate has ruled that there is probable cause for a case to continue against a man accused of threatenin­g to kill Alaska’s two U.S. senators in profanity-filled voicemails left on their office phones.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Scott A. Oravec on Tuesday ordered the case against Jay Allen Johnson be sent to the grand jury for considerat­ion. Given the fluidity of the COVID-19 situation in Alaska — Tuesday’s preliminar­y hearing was held remotely — it was not known when that grand jury would be empaneled.

Johnson, 65, faces counts of threatenin­g to murder a U.S. official, threatenin­g interstate communicat­ions, being a felon in possession of weapons and threatenin­g to destroy property by fire.

He is accused of making threats against U.S. Sens. Lisa Murkowski and Dan Sullivan and of threatenin­g to burn down properties owned by Murkowski in a series of messages left over the span of months.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan Tansey called one witness during the preliminar­y hearing, FBI Special Agent Matthew Patrick Allen Oudbier, who investigat­ed the voicemails left at the senators’ offices in Washington, D.C. He said he received copies of the voice messages from both offices and from Capitol police and traced them back to Johnson. In some messages, Oudbier said, the caller identified himself as Jay Johnson and left his Alaska phone number.

During the hearing, Tansey played one voicemail left for Murkowski, which he said was enough to establish probable cause.

In it, the caller is upset over people who enter the country illegally and tells Murkowski, “Your life is worth $5,000. That’s all it’s worth.” He vows to hire the “terrorists, assassins” that the caller says she has let in. “I’m going to use them to come and assassinat­e your (expletives).”

He also tells her not to run for re-election in 2022 “because you’re not doing what Alaskans want.”

In another voicemail that was played at Johnson’s initial appearance on Oct. 8, Johnson is alleged to have said he would use his skills as a veteran to carry out his threats.

When asked, Oudbier said he could find no evidence that Johnson was a veteran.

Johnson’s wife, Catherine Pousson-johnson, said at the Oct. 8 detention hearing that her husband was in pain after recent surgeries on his spine, knee and shoulder.

“My husband is an old man, and he gets very angry listening to politics on the news,” she said.

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