Photo: Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Office Photo: Evan Vucci, STF

What an Ohio man described as a drunken election night venting of frustrations did not amuse the Secret Service.

Zachary Benson, a 24-year-old from the Cleveland suburbs, got an unwanted visit from federal agents inquiring about his tweeted threat to kill President-elect Donald Trump shortly after the New Yorker was declared the winner a week ago.

"My life goal is to assassinate Trump. Don't care if I serve infinite sentences," The Daily Mail quoted Benson as tweeting. "That man deserves to decease (sic) existing." Seconds earlier he tweeted: "Diplomacy. F***ing fools. I hate you all. I want to bomb every one of your voting booths and your general areas."

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Trump won Ohio by nine points, but lost Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland, by a 66-31 percent margin.

While multiple assassination threats (and desires) were tweeted in the hours after last week's election, Benson appears to be the first person charged in connection with the online remarks.

The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported that Benson told the Secret Service agent that he spent election night drinking and eating at a restaurant with his father and a friend.

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Once home, Benson told agents, he tweeted the remarks because he was "just frustrated thinking about how President-elect Trump's policies could affect his job."

Benson apparently deleted the tweets the next morning and told agents he had no intention of following through with the threats.

And, if election night is any indication, the Secret Service is in for a busy four years ahead.