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U.S. ambassador to South Korea Mark Lippert (C) covers a wound to his face as he leaves the Sejong Cultural Institute in Seoul on March 5, 2015, after he was slashed on his face and arm by a blade-wielding assailant shouting anti-war slogans in an attack, police and reports said.YONHAP/AFP / Getty Images

South Korean police said Friday that they had arrested a 33-year-old jobless man for allegedly making an online threat to kill the U.S. ambassador in Seoul.

The man allegedly left an English message vowing to "kill" Mark Lippert with "nuclear poisoning" on the website of the White House on July 8, police said in a statement.

The man, surnamed Lee, has denied the allegation. But police say they've found a draft of the online threat and records of access to the White House homepage on his laptop computer, according to the statement.

The allegations come just months after Lippert was attacked by another man who slashed him with a knife during a breakfast forum. Lippert suffered deep gashes on his face and arm in that attack in March and was treated at a Seoul hospital for five days.

Police said the message, which contained many grammar errors, didn't clearly explain why he wanted to kill Lippert. They refused to disclose the full message.

Police said the man has lived in seclusion at his home but there is no record of any psychiatric hospital treatment. The investigation began at the request of the U.S. Embassy in Seoul, according to the police statement.

If convicted, the man could face up to five years in prison.

The man who attacked Lippert in March was later charged with attempted murder. Police said he chose Lippert as a target to highlight his opposition to U.S.-South Korean military drills, which North Korea calls an invasion rehearsal. Seoul and Washington have said their drills are purely defensive.

Anti-U.S. activists have long blamed the presence of 28,500 U.S. troops stationed in South Korea for the continuing split of the Korean Peninsula.

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