Soon after officials announced the arrest of Cesar Altieri Sayoc Jr., who is accused of sending pipe bombs to prominent Democratic figures, cable news offered the first window into the Florida man’s state of mind when they aired footage of his vehicle: a white van covered in pro-Trump and anti-media and anti-liberal imagery.

And like social media accounts that were allegedly run by Sayoc, his van was a platform to show his support of President Donald Trump that verged on the obsessive, and to denigrate Trump’s perceived opposition — some of whom would receive bombs in the mail.

The van was noticeable enough to be recognized by television producer David Cypkin, who had photographed it back in December 2017 and shared the photos with his business partner, Billy Corben, who posted them on Twitter on Friday. The van was also spotted in Asheville, North Carolina, in 2017.

These are not conventional political bumper stickers. Most of them are images rooted in internet memes. Others reference throwback Obama-era scandals like Benghazi and the IRS.

To get a deeper understanding of how Sayoc thinks about politics, it’s worth going through where these images come from.

“No George Soros globalist”

The focus of Sayoc’s van was railing against Trump’s purported enemies in support of the man Sayoc described as “A man of his word over 40 years”

According to the Washington Post, Sayoc mentioned George Soros 34 times, Barack Obama 29 times, and Hillary Clinton 21 times on his Twitter feed, and many of the memes he used on Twitter made their way to his van, with Sayoc calling Soros a “globalist socialist progressive Democrat.”

Sayoc, a registered Republican since March 2016, also put statements praising Florida Republicans Rick Scott and Ron DeSantis — both running for office this year — on his van.

One of the memes Sayoc used on both his social media and his van, “The Swamp to be Drained,” lists alleged scandals of the Obama administration, like the existence of Black Lives Matter, the Department of Justice’s Fast and Furious debacle and “Obama’s illegal executive orders.”

These appeared alongside pictures of Democratic figures like former President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama, former President Bill Clinton and former secretary of state and 2016 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, Democratic National Committee Chair Tom Perez, former Attorneys General Eric Holder and Loretta Lynch, and former interim Democratic Party Chair Donna Brazile.

The meme also shows mainstream news figures, like MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, NBC’s Chuck Todd, and CNN’s Anderson Cooper.

The “IRS scandal” is also featured, as is an image of Lois Lerner, an IRS official during the scandal. From 2006 to 2013, Lerner ran the IRS’s Exempt Organizations division, which oversees organizations seeking tax-exempt status. In 2013, an Inspector Generals’ report found that Lerner’s division had unfairly targeted conservative and right-leaning groups when they applied for tax exemptions, though Lerner claimed to have done nothing wrong. (The Trump Department of Justice has since declined to charge Lerner based on a lack of evidence.)

The Obamas, the Clintons, Holder, and CNN were among the recipients of the devices Sayoc allegedly mailed, resulting in the evacuation of CNN’s New York headquarters.

“America back”

Sayoc’s van also features multiple images of celebrities who support Trump, like country music singers Toby Keith and Lee Greenwood (singer of 1984’s “I’m Proud to Be An American”).

It also shows a reference to Trump’s Electoral College win in 2016, stating that Trump earned 306 Electoral votes. However, Trump won 304 electoral college votes, not 306 — the 306 number is a reference to the number of pledged electors the president won, but two of those electors became “faithless electors” and did not vote for the candidate that won their states.

Sayoc also put up some of the Trump administration’s job creation numbers from 2017 on his van, along with commentary like, “America back.” (The 28,000 number might more accurately refer to the number of manufacturing jobs added in February 2017, not the number of all new jobs created that month.)

And on his front passenger window, he added another message: “Zero tolerance kill your enemy and those who rob you then take them to Everglade for gators.”

Earlier this month, Sayoc also used the threat of the Everglades on Twitter against a former Congressional press secretary, telling her, “So you like make threats. We Unconquered Seminole Tribe will answer your threats. We have nice silent Air boat ride for u here on our land Everglades Swamp. We will see you 4 sure. Hug your loved ones real close every time you leave home.”

He then took photos he believed to be of her and shared them — alongside photographs of human body parts being consumed by alligators.

She reported his Twitter account, but was told his tweets did not constitute “abusive behavior.”

“Native Americans” and “Top Youth Soccer Recruits” for Trump

Alongside images of President Trump and Vice President Mike Pence, Sayoc’s van, like his Twitter feed, features images that reference his alleged Native American heritage.

Though the Seminole Tribe of Florida has since said that Sayoc was not a member of the tribe, his van features signage like “Native Americans for Trump” over the flag of the Seminole Tribe of Florida.

On Sayoc’s Twitter feed, he frequently mentioned the “Unconquered Seminole Tribe,” a reference to the fact that the Seminole Tribe never signed a peace agreement with the United States government and were never defeated in battle by government forces. The symbol at the center of the flag is a chickee, a form of housing widely used by members of the Seminole tribe and is representative of the Seminole Tribal Council.

And Sayoc was also a fan of mixed martial arts; his van features a sticker for America’s Top Team, a mixed martial arts gym located in Coconut Grove, Florida.

Perhaps the second-biggest theme on Sayoc’s van, besides Donald Trump and Trump’s opponents, is soccer, specifically at the University of North Carolina. After attending Brevard College (a small school in North Carolina) for three semesters, Sayoc was a walk-on to the University of North Carolina Charlotte soccer team in 1983, playing for six to eight weeks and appearing in 11 games (but mostly spending time on the bench.)

According to Mark Colone, who was University of North Carolina Charlotte’s sports information director in 1983 and spoke to the Charlotte Observer on Friday: