A St. Paul man was charged Wednesday with stalking and making threats of violence to Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton.

The man allegedly left several voicemails for Dayton. They included him saying, “All I want is your (expletives) office executed … I want (Homeland Security, the Secret Service, or the FBI, or a hospital) to execute you in a painful manner for your treason …” and “You can start counting the (expletives) days you have left to walk the earth.”

David Alexander Tourville, 57, called Dayton three times in January and four more in April, according to a criminal complaint filed in Ramsey County District Court.

In his calls, Tourville suggested that Dayton kill himself, accused him of treason and suggested that either the Treasury Department or the people would kill Dayton in the near future, among other threats, the charges said.

Recent efforts by law enforcement to contact him have been unsuccessful, the complaint said.

The governor’s office had no comment Wednesday.

The Minnesota State Patrol previously had contact with Tourville in March 2015 regarding another voicemail left on the governor’s reception line.

Later that year, he was charged with stalking for calling a Ramsey County official 60 times, expressing threats and profane language. The calls were related to property that had been forfeited for failure to pay taxes, according to the 2015 criminal complaint. He was found incompetent to stand trial and the complaint was dismissed.

Some of Tourville’s comments to Dayton last month referenced the forfeiture.

“I told you, stealing my house was gonna cost you and your (expletives) state more money than any house you have ever (expletive) stolen from anybody before. And now it’s going to cost you your life on top of it,” Tourville said, according to charges.

Tourville does not have any felony convictions on his record.

Dave Orrick contributed to this report.