The life of controversial political activist Pamela Geller, known for her anti-Muslim sentiments, has been threatened once again with her New York City address getting tweeted and revealed to the public.

After revealing Geller's New York City address and apartment number, the tweet told readers to "#GoForth," The International Business Times reported. The Twitter account that sent out the address has since been deleted.

The alleged threat of Geller's beheading by extremist jihadist groups still hangs in spite the arrest of two suspects, according to The Guardian.

The tweet came on the heels of Thursday's arrest of 24-year-old Nicholas Rovinski, who prefers to be called Nuh Amriki aka Nuh al Andalusi and has been charged with conspiring to provide support to ISIS, the U.S. attorney's office for Massachusetts said.

Rovinski joins another suspect, 25-year-old David Wright, a.k.a. Dawud Sharif Abdul Khaliq, who is  now under police custody.

Wright's uncle, Usaamah Abdullah Rahim, was shot by police authorities in Rosindale, Mass., on June 2.

Geller, who heads the American Freedom Defense Initiative, received death threats after her vocal pronouncements denouncing the Muslim religion and all its aspects.

She first caught attention when she denounced the construction of an Islamic community center near Ground Zero, the site of the World Trade Center towers that were brought down on 9/11, the Daily Beast reported.

In May, Geller organized a competition in Garland, Texas, to see who could draw the best cartoon of the prophet Muhammad as a response to the attacks made on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. Two gunmen opened fire at the event, wounding a security guard before both were killed by the police, The Guardian said.

Extremist groups have proclaimed war and death to those "defaming the religion of Islam or the prophet Muhammad," the Daily Beast reported.