A man who opened fire at the White House in November 2011 is scheduled for sentencing on Monday, USA TODAY reported.
Prosecutors have recommended that Oscar Ramiro Ortega-Hernandez, 23, serves a 27-year prison sentence.
Though no one was injured during the shooting, government authorities said Ortega-Hernandez hit the south side of the White House eight times -- causing nearly $100,000 worth of damage.
Initially, prosecutors charged the Idaho man with attempting to assasinate the president but agreed to drop the charge in a plea deal in 2013.
The prosecution said in court documents that his attack "was the culmination of several months during which the defendant fulminated against the president, whom he perceived to be the Antichrist, made threats against him and prepared to take violent action against him."
President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama were in California during the incident. However, U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer said two unspecified members of the first family were present.
According to the Associated Press, lawyers for Ortega-Hernandez claimed their client was suffering from depression and extreme stress, leading to the belief that Armageddon was coming. As a result, they asked for a 10-year prison sentence.