Lawrence was arrested after he posted an ad that read, "Wanted dead, All the Maplewood city police officers, paying one million per head." The ad also mentioned a specific Maplewood detective, offering $2 million for his head.
A spokeswoman with the Department of Justice declined to say whether Lawrence had the capability to carry out the bounties.
The online threat came about as a result of an existing case. On Feb. 6, Maplewood officers responded to a disturbance at a 7707 Lindbergh Drive apartment that was occupied by Lawrence and his mother. Officers at the scene determined Lawrence was wanted on a failure-to-appear warrant.
When officers contacted Lawrence, he began lifting his shirt. Believing he was attempting to remove a weapon, officers used a TASER to subdue him. A search of the apartment uncovered a marijuana plant, drug paraphernalia, a .22-caliber rifle, and a shotgun with no serial number.
At least five times after the incident, Lawrence contacted the department, requesting the return of his firearms. He became angry and "repeatedly insisted that the police could not keep his guns," according to court documents from the case.