A man who threatened to run over patients seeking coronavirus tests at a pharmacy and an unregistered motorist who told police she was out playing Pokemon Go where among New Jersey’s latest installment of people accused of offenses tied to the pandemic, officials said.

Gov. Phil Murphy has dubbed the growing list of alleged violators as “knuckleheads” for breaching a variety of his orders put in place to curb the virus outbreak.

He did it again Monday.

“To the knuckleheads that need to be called out, they need to be called out. Running people over in a parking lot, you’ve got to be kidding me,” the governor said during his daily press briefing in Trenton.

Murphy was discussing the Camden County case of Jacob M. Carr, 30, who allegedly posted angry messages on the Barrington Parent’s Page on Facebook, where he targeted people going for coronavirus tests at a Rite Aid in the borough, authorities said.

“I’m gonna run you all over with my SUV if I see anyone getting tested," the Barrington resident posted, according to the state Attorney General’s Office.

Panicked residents alerted local police, who arrested him Sunday on charges of terroristic threats during an emergency, obstruction and violating the emergency orders by impeding the performance of an emergency function, the attorney general's office said Monday.

Though Carr used a bogus Facebook profile, police tracked the postings to him, authorities said.

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In an unrelated case — included in a now-daily list of alleged violators — 49-year-old Renee F. Perrine was pulled over Saturday by Bay Head police for driving an unregistered vehicle, authorities said. She told officers she was driving around playing the mobile phone game Pokemon Go.

Police charged the Toms River resident with violating the emergency orders and operating an unregistered vehicle.

“One month after Governor Murphy issued his emergency orders, we are flattening the curve and saving lives, because the vast majority of our residents are conscientiously obeying the social distancing rules and doing their share to fight COVID-19,” Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal said in a statement.

“Unfortunately, there are still those who violate the orders, risking the further spread of this deadly virus,” Grewal said.

New Jersey officials on Monday reported at least 88,806 positive cases with 4,377 deaths from the outbreak. Murphy said he planned to announce a “broad blueprint” for lifting the statewide near-lockdown and continued to remind residents to keep following the strict health restrictions.

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Noah Cohen may be reached at ncohen@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @noahyc. Find NJ.com on Facebook.