Kyle Long, 33, of Maine, has been charged with making criminal threats after driving cross-country with baseball bats to allegedly confront Google staff

A man who drove more than 3,300 miles from Maine to California to confront Google officials over the fate of his YouTube channel has been arrested with three baseball bats in his car's trunk.

Police in Mountain View, the San Francisco-area city where Google's sprawling campus is located, were warned by two out-of-state agencies that Kyle Long was on his way and arrested him Sunday on suspicion of making criminal threats.

According to a press release from the Mountain View Police Department, the 33-year-old Waterville, Maine, resident was upset because his YouTube channel had been shut down.

He allegedly told his hometown police that he would get violent if his Google confrontation didn't go well.

Google is the parent company of YouTube. The company's Mountain View headquarters employs as many as 20,000 people.

Police in Mountain View, California, which is home to Google's main campus (pictured), intercepted and arrested Long on Sunday

Long had traveled more than 3,000 miles from Waterville, Maine, to Mountain View, California, prior to his arrest

Last April, a video maker with a grudge over YouTube policies, Nasim Aghdam, shot and wounded three people at the YouTube campus in San Bruno before killing herself.

On Friday, Mountain View police got a call from Iowa State Patrol notifying them that they had recently been in contact with Long.

Iowa State Patrol had spoken with Long twice that day: once after his vehicle was involved in a minor car crash and a second time after he allegedly vandalized a restroom at a gas station store a short time later.

‘Long informed state troopers that he was on his way to Mountain View, California, to meet with Google after his YouTube channel had been shut down, which he claimed was resulting in him losing money,’ the news release stated.

Employees at the defaced gas station store in Iowa did not want to press charges against Long, and the collision did not warrant Long to be detained.

Last April, disgruntled video maker Nasim Aghdam (pictured) shot and wounded three people at the YouTube campus in San Bruno before killing herself

On Sunday, police in Waterville, Maine, reached out to their counterparts in Mountain View saying they had received information that Long ‘had stated if his meeting with Google personnel did not go well, he was going to resort to physical violence.’

Mountain View police dispatched officers to the Google offices to look out for Long. They also had officers monitoring all major highways around Mountain View to try and intercept the man before he was able to get anywhere near the company’s main campus.

Police departments in all neighboring cities that had either Google or YouTube offices were put on alert as well.

Just before 1pm on Sunday, Mountain View police spotted Long’s car near Highway 101 and Moffett Boulevard. Officers pulled him over and detained him without incident.

Inside Long’s car, officers found three baseball bats, and Long’s phone had directions up giving him instructions on how to get to Mountain View.

Long was subsequently booked into the Santa Clara County Jail on $25,000 bond and his car was towed.