MIAMI, Fla. — Another suspicious package that was addressed to CNN was intercepted at an Atlanta post office on Monday, according to the network.

"There is no imminent danger to the CNN center. All mail, at all CNN domestic bureaus, is being screened at off-site facilities as of last Wednesday, so this package would NOT have come directly to the CNN Center, even if it hadn't been intercepted first," according to Jeff Zucker, president of CNN.

Authorities warned days ago that it was possible that other suspicious packages could still be in circulation. Cesar Sayoc is accused of sending out pipe bombs to top Democrats and others who have been critical of President Donald Trump.

Meanwhile, Sayoc faced a federal judge on Monday in Miami. The judge ordered him held in federal custody until Friday, when he has a detention hearing at 10 a.m. in federal court.

Prosecutors think Sayoc is a flight risk and want him held without bond. 

Daniel Aaronson is one of three attorneys representing Cesary Sayoc. Aaronson said that he represented Sayoc for past cases but won’t say how the attorneys got involved in this case. 

Eventually Sayoc will be moved to New York, where he will be prosecuted. In addition to deciding the bail question, Friday's hearing will also decide when he would be moved.

The Aventura man, 56, is facing five charges in connection with the bomb plot.

He has been held in Broward County since federal authorities arrested him Friday morning.

Authorities say Sayoc sent pipe bombs to former President Barack Obama and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, among others.

Sen. Kamala Harris of California, one of the targets of the mail bombs, spoke Monday morning in Miami.

"You know the voices that are trying to sell hate and division among us, they're not only irresponsible, it's harmful to who we are, our identity as Americans," she said.

Sayoc, a former stripper, and strip club DJ, will be extradited to and prosecuted in New York at some point.

Law enforcement say that lab technicians had linked DNA on two pipe bomb packages Sayoc is accused of sending to prominent Democrats to a sample previously collected by Florida state authorities.

In addition, a fingerprint match of his allegedly turned up on a separate mailing that authorities say he sent.

According to authorities, investigators poured over his social media accounts and found the same spelling mistakes on his online posts — "Hilary" Clinton, Debbie Wasserman "Shultz" — as on the mailings he allegedly sent out.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.