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Oklahoma man threatened to copycat Las Vegas shooting, arrested on terroristic hoax warrant

This booking photo released by Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office shows Roderick Lamar Robinson. (Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office via AP

An Oklahoma man has been arrested after threatening to carry out shootings in Oklahoma City and San Antonio similar to the mass shooting in Las Vegas, police said Wednesday.

Roderick Lamar Robinson was arrested Tuesday on a terroristic hoax warrant at a home in Warr Acres, the Oklahoma City suburb where he lives, said Oklahoma City police Capt. Bo Mathews.

Several people sent messages to police alerting them that Robinson had posted on Facebook that he would kill people in those cities in a manner similar to Sunday’s shooting in Las Vegas, Mathews said.

Click to play video: 'Marilou Danley knew nothing about plans for attack, lawyer says'
Marilou Danley knew nothing about plans for attack, lawyer says

A Facebook page that appears to be Robinson’s contained no such threats on Wednesday.

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Jail records show Robinson, who is 39, remained in custody Wednesday. No attorney was listed to speak on his behalf.

San Antonio police spokeswoman Romana Lopez said the department was notified of the threats and learned that Robinson travels between Oklahoma and San Antonio. She said San Antonio officers notified Oklahoma City police, who then arrested Robinson with assistance from Warr Acres police.

READ MOORE: Las Vegas Shooting: What we know and don’t know about the massacre

In the Las Vegas shooting, the gunman opened fire from his 32nd-floor hotel suite, striking fans at a country music festival below. He killed 58 people and wounded more than 500 others before killing himself in his hotel room, authorities said.

Mathews said it isn’t known if Robinson had the weapons needed to carry out a mass shooting, but that any such threat will be taken seriously.

“You can’t just, under your breath, say these kind of things anymore,” Mathews said. “You do have to take it seriously now.”

He added that officers become aware of such threats more quickly now because of social media.

Lopez, who communicated with The Associated Press through email, said Robinson is wanted in Texas on a marijuana possession charge and will likely face a terroristic threatening charge.

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