GRAND BLANC TOWNSHIP, MI – The man accused of supplying a fake Central Intelligence Agency ID and badge while legally carrying a loaded 9mm gun at NCG Trillium theater Tuesday, July 30, had his concealed pistol's license suspended by Genesee County, officials said.

Cassidy J. Delavergne faces up to 6 months in jail if convicted of having a fake ID card with the CIA emblem and a golden rectangle, which appeared similar to a security chip found on real federal badges. He also wore body armor and was carrying a 9mm Beretta pistol loaded with 17 rounds, as well as an extra clip with another 17 rounds.

Police also found more than 100 9mm rounds in his car.

He was attending the movie "Red 2" on Tuesday night with his mother, according to Mark Henning, chief operating officer at NCG. He was not threatening anyone, Henning said.

"Our employees and on-site authorities acted so a resolution could be achieved in a quick and calm fashion," Henning said in a statement, declining to comment further.

Detective Matt Harburn of the Grand Blanc Township Police Department said an employee called 911 about a suspicious man. Police asked Delavergne to step out of the theater and that is when he supplied the ID and badge, Harburn said. The FBI was called in and took over the investigation from there.

The concealed weapon license was suspended pending the outcome of the ID charge, said John Potbury, a spokesman for Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton, who serves on the gun board that determines if a CPL is given. Potbury said Delavergne was approved for the CPL in February.

He had no prior criminal history and the gun board was not alerted to any mental health issues at the time, Potbury said.

Since the fake ID charge is a misdemeanor, a conviction would not prohibit him from having a gun. But the gun board, made up of representatives from the prosecutor's office, sheriff's office and Michigan State Police, would have to approve it, Potbury said.

Delavergne told police that he came from work and did not want to leave the gun and body armor in his car. He admitted that the credentials were fake and said he displayed the badge to minimize theater patron concern about the firearm.

Harburn said police explained to him that having a weapon in the open like that makes people nervous, especially considering recent events, particularly the mass shooting July 20, 2012, in a movie theater in Aurora, Colo., in which the suspect also came with a gun and body army. Twelve people were killed.

"I said, 'People are heightened right now. People are scared,'" Harburn said. "It's not illegal; it's just out of the norm."

Genesee County Sheriff Robert Pickell said something clearly was not right with the situation.

"A guy that dresses up like he did and has fake credentials, clearly he does not have it all together," he said.

Delavergne was released on an unsecured $5,000 bond. According to conditions of his release, he must surrender his CPL permit and not possess any firearms, ammunition or dangerous weapons.

Bond restrictions also prevent him from entering Trillium, court records say. He must also submit to a mental health evaluation and treatment if deemed necessary.

An attorney on file did not return a call seeking comment. It's not clear what his next court date is.