Chicago man arrested for threatening conference where Sessions said 'Lock her up'

The 28-year-old was arrested outside Chicago after vowing to "blow up" forum.

28-year-old Alexander Micah Cohen was arrested outside Chicago late last month, according to authorities in Cook County, Illinois.

The Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, D.C., launched an investigation into the alleged threats after the parent of a student attending the conference saw some of Cohen's messages posted online and contacted the FBI.

When an MPD officer then contacted Cohen, he insisted his comments were "a joke," according to an account from the officer filed in court. Cohen has now been charged with attempting to make a false report connected to a weapon of mass destruction.

Appearing in D.C. Superior Court on Friday, Cohen pleaded not guilty to the charge against him. He was released on his own recognizance.

Four weeks ago, while young conservatives from across the country were convening at George Washington University in Washington for the High School Leadership Summit, Cohen posted on his Twitter page a picture of a man holding a baseball bat wrapped in metal spikes and this message: "On my way to #HSLS2018 to greet the nice conservative teenagers."

Cohen lives in Skokie, Illinois – more than 700 miles away from the nation's capital.

Just days later, Sessions made national headlines when – with an amused smile – he repeated the phrase "lock her up" after students started chanting it. The phrase was a common call at Trump's rallies during his 2016 presidential campaign, with Trump supporters calling for Hillary Clinton to be jailed for her use of a private email server as secretary of state.

Archived versions of his Twitter page show that on July 26, two days after Sessions appeared at the conference, Cohen followed-up his previous Twitter posting with a picture of himself and this message: "I'm riding through D.C. [to] go and shoot GWU up ... We gon' come and blow GWU up."

That message, with its explicitly threatening language, prompted local police in Washington to seek help from Twitter to identify the person who posted it.

When police contacted Cohen, he told the officer that she "should focus on others who post photos of guns," detective Elisa Brown wrote in court documents. "When ask[ed] the meaning of his posting on July 26, 2018, [Cohen] declined to comment any further."

It's unclear why the case is only now becoming public. In court on Friday, Cohen was ordered to stay away from George Washington University, and another hearing in his case was set for next month.

Cohen's Twitter page has been suspended. But a search of his name online reveals it's not the first time his posts have raised eyebrows.

In June of last year, he falsely posed as an online publication’s editor-in-chief and pushed out "fake news" after a gunman opened fire on Republican lawmakers practicing baseball at a park outside Washington, seriously wounding Rep. Steven Scalise, R-Louisiana.

In the wake of the attack, Cohen posted an infographic that stated: "Killing 3 GOP senators prevents ten 9/11s."

Slate.com later featured Cohen in a profile of the "macabre things" promoted on social media after the assault on lawmakers, and Slate.com spoke with Cohen for its profile.

"He told me his real name is Alexander Cohen and that he lives in Chicago, where he works in the life insurance industry. He has about 2,000 followers on Twitter, half of whom sprung up after he posted the fake infographic," Slate.com wrote.

Cohen told Slate.com "the purposes of these actions were strictly for entertainment. I did not foresee it reaching many people who would not understand it was a joke."

Describing himself as an "independent left-leaning," Cohen added: "I think the danger of violence being incited from jokes on the internet is relatively low compared to the danger of violence being incited from people learning how they will be affected by policy," he said. "If conservatives are actually arguing that, it feels wildly hypocritical given their defense of the current rise in hateful rhetoric and incitement of violence against people for their identity (race, religion, gender) as falling under the purview of free speech."

After his court appearance on Friday, ABC News asked Cohen about his case.

"No comment," is all he said. His attorney also declined to comment.