The anger-management program doesn’t seem to be working for Jerry Expose Jr., according to a criminal complaint filed in Ramsey County District Court.

Expose, 44, of St. Paul, was ordered to complete anger-management training as part of his sentence for a terroristic threats conviction after he threatened to kill his 6-year-old daughter, his ex-girlfriend and the ex-girlfriend’s unborn child.

Expose also was accused of wadding up a picture his daughter had drawn and stuffing it into the girl’s mouth and then pinning the girl against the wall by her neck during the Dec. 17 incident.

Expose was angry that the drawing depicted his ex-girlfriend’s new boyfriend, according to a criminal complaint.

Now, Expose faces a new charge of making terroristic threats — this time against a child-protection worker — while attending an anger-management program.

According to a new complaint, as part of his sentence for the previous case, Expose attended an Oct. 10 anger-management counseling session with a therapist.

Expose told his therapist, identified as NM in the complaint, that a child-protection worker for Ramsey County, identified as DP, was a barrier to getting his children back, according to the complaint.

“Expose said if his court hearing on October 13, 2012, went awry he would break DP’s back. Expose said that if he couldn’t get to DP he would make a couple of calls to have her taken out,” the complaint said.

The therapist was so concerned about Expose’s comments that she contacted the child-protection worker to warn her about what Expose said, the complaint said.

“Expose told NM that when he thinks of DP or hears her name he becomes angry. Expose said, ‘Everyone has to go to their car sometime.’ Expose said he would end DP to send a message to Ramsey County Child Protection,” the complaint said.

The new complaint charged Expose with one count of making terroristic threats against the child-protection worker.

When he was sentenced March 22 on the earlier charges, Expose was ordered to spend four months in the Ramsey County workhouse but also received an 18-month prison sentence that would be stayed for five years as long as he complied with terms of his probation, which include remaining law-abiding, abstaining from all drugs and alcohol and following the probation department’s recommendations on programs such as anger management.

Richard Chin can be reached at 651-228-5560.