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Chicago man gets probation for threatening then-Sen. Flake

"I am totally ashamed of this. I have embarrassed my family," Blevins told the judge shortly before being sentenced.

PHOENIX — Editor's note: On the above video, Jeff Flake talked about the threats he received and the possibility of running for president in 2020. 

(AP) — A Chicago man was sentenced Monday to three years' probation after previously admitting he left a threatening voicemail for former Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake during Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation hearings.

Flake, a Republican who left office at the end of 2018, played a key role during the hearings when he requested an FBI investigation of claims by a woman who accused Kavanaugh of sexual assault. Kavanaugh denied the claims and was eventually confirmed to the lifetime appointment.

Authorities had previously declined to name person the threat was made against, but U.S. District Judge Susan Brnovich said at the sentencing of James Dean Blevins Jr. that Flake was the victim.

Blevins pleaded guilty to a federal retaliation charge and had been expected to receive probation. The judge forbade him from drinking alcohol while on probation and authorized anger management counseling his probation officer deemed it appropriate.

"I am totally ashamed of this. I have embarrassed my family," Blevins told the judge shortly before being sentenced.

Brnovich said Blevins crossed a line when he threatened Flake. "No public official should be faced with that simply because someone disagrees with them," she said.

Blevins acknowledged that he left the threatening voicemail on Sept. 17, 2018, in a telephone call from Chicago to the senator's office in Arizona.

"I am tired of him interrupting our president, and I am coming down there to take him and his family out," the message said, according to court documents.

Flake has said his family received death threats after he asked the Senate Judiciary Committee to hear testimony from Christine Blasey Ford, who accused Kavanaugh of sexual assault.

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Kavanaugh was confirmed following contentious Senate Judiciary Committee hearings in which Ford said the nominee had sexually assaulted her while the two were teenagers living in Maryland.

Flake played a key role during the hearings when he requested an FBI investigation of the claims. 

Flake eventually voted for Kavanaugh's nomination.

In a separate case, Ronald Derisi of Smithtown, New York, was sentenced to 18 months in prison for threatening to kill two U.S. senators who supported Kavanaugh's confirmation.

RELATED: Kavanaugh confirmation likely with support from Collins, Flake & Manchin

Officials had declined to name two the senators.

Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa identified himself as one of the victims. And the staff of Sen. Susan Collins of Maine also confirmed that she received threatening messages.

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