A man accused of shooting two Lakewood police officers sat in the bed of his Ford pickup truck outside of a home Saturday night armed to the teeth and ready for battle, according to court papers released Tuesday.

Gordon Lee Moench Jr., 54, waited with three guns, including an SKS assault rifle and a spare 30-round magazine, wanting officers to perceive him as a threat, according to the documents. Then just before 10 p.m., he called 911.

There is a “guy out front with a gun ready to kill a bunch of people,” Moench told a dispatcher, court papers said.

The dispatcher asked who the caller was.

“I’m the guy with the gun,” Moench said.

Moench appeared through video conference in Jefferson County Court on Tuesday morning. Clad in orange jail dress and sitting in a wheelchair, Moench, in the Jefferson County Jail, showed little emotion as a judge outlined his alleged crimes.

The judge set a $2 million bail.

Court papers outlined the exchange between Moench and police, revealing how he sprayed bullets from the assault rifle at officers trying to check on his welfare hours after he had tried to kill himself, all apparently in response to his wavering marriage.

Moench later said the shootout amounted to an attempted “suicide by cop” as part of efforts to leave his wife with the pay-out from a life insurance policy.

He also told investigators he is evil and deserves to go to hell.

Officers Jonathan Key and Kimberly Collins went to the home on the 9700 block of West Jewell Place shortly after Moench called 911. Moench’s wife, Audrey Moench, already had called police to say that the two were in the process of separating and that her husband had told her he “no longer wanted to live,” according to court documents. Audrey Moench told dispatchers there was going to “be a battle,” warning that her estranged husband had several firearms.

Moench is accused of wounding Key and Collins.

He again called 911 after shooting the officers and told a dispatcher, “God, I apologize. I hit that cop, and now it’s too far,” according to documents.

Moench said he was leaving the area so the officers could receive aid.

Another officer, Luke Godfrey, arrived and ordered Moench to drop his gun before Moench lifted the gun in his direction, according to court papers. Godfrey fired several shotgun rounds, striking Moench in the chest.

Collins remains hospitalized in stable condition, police said. Key was released Sunday. Moench was released from the hospital Monday and was arrested.