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A Nashville man pleaded guilty in federal court Monday to mailing his former supervisor a threatening message scrawled across a Ku Klux Klan publication.

Daniel Puckett, 58, will be sentenced to the crime in January. He faces five years in prison, a $250,000 fine, and supervision upon release.

Puckett was employed by Aerotech Corp., a temporary employment service, which placed him at Unilever Corp. in Covington, about 40 miles north of Memphis.

Unilever released Puckett and he responded by mailing his former supervisor a copy of โ€œThe Torch,โ€ a Ku Klux Klan publication, with the following message written on the front: โ€œWe have space for you and your family under a big oak tree.โ€

Inside the publication, Puckett wrote that the the supervisor was not a member of the โ€œKnightsโ€ but wanted to attend the โ€œNational Klan Congress,โ€ according to the Department of Justice.

โ€œTodayโ€™s guilty plea reflects the vile nature of the threatening communication Daniel Puckett sent to his fellow co-worker,โ€ said U.S. Attorney Edward L. Stanton. โ€œThe U.S. Attorneyโ€™s Office will continue to vigorously prosecute those who commit heinous acts like Puckettโ€™s, as there is simply no room in a civilized society for this kind of hateful conduct.โ€