MADISON, Wis. – Wisconsin state Sen. Steve Nass wants the state’s Department of Justice to investigate a University of Wisconsin-Madison student’s “vile and racist” video depicting the beheading of a police officer.

UW-Madison junior Eneale Pickett released a commercial this week for his clothing line Insert Apparel that features UW students portraying police officers with pig masks as they hang a black student with an American flag noose, Channel 3000 reports.

MORE NEWS: Know These Before Moving From Cyprus To The UK

The video incorporates a voiceover of President Donald Trump’s remarks in response to a deadly clash between white nationalists and antifa protestors in Charlottesville last month as black students wearing Pickett’s clothes and goofy surgical masks chase down the pig officers with a machete and sledge hammer.

The white Insert Apparel hoodies read “F*** the police they the biggest gang in Amerikkka,” “#NOHASHTAG can ever bring me justice I have seen my death way too many times to imagine anything different,” and “Destroy the city that caused you to bury me.”

The video closes with the group of black students walking out of the woods with a decapitated pig mask wearing a police hat dripping with blood – and Pickett flashing a bloody machete.

“This is to start a conversation about police brutality,” Pickett said. “I want people to look deeper than the image on the screen, and to think critically.”

The Chicago native, whose studying at UW Madison on a “First Wave” scholarship, explained to The Badger Herald that he was forced to up the ante this year after gaining national attention with his controversial clothing line as a sophomore.

In October 2016, Pickett release a series of hoodies and crewneck sweatshirts with anti-police messages including “If I encounter another cop with a God complex I’m going to have to show the world that they are human,” and “All white people are racist.”

MORE NEWS: How to prepare for face-to-face classes

“This line is by far the most aggressive, it’s by far the most in your face. And it’s by far my most truthful line,” Pickett said. “I say truthful because I let everything out. I knew I needed more media this time — and not just photos, but a commercial, so people can see the full picture.”

His intent with the new commercial, he said, is to expose how “the police terrorizes black and brown bodies communites (sic).”

“Once you add a visual that’s so daring, so intense, it forces you to talk and to say something. Now I have to give attention to this issue because [offending police], to them, is unacceptable. But my body all over social media, dead, is acceptable,” Pickett told the Herald.

“I don’t make my art for you to love me. I make my art so you can critically think. One thing you are doing now is talking about police, and the corruption in the police force, whether you like it or not,” Pickett said. “You’re defending the corruption or you’re against the corruption. But you’re still talking about it regardless.”

Among those talking about the video is Sen. Steve Nass, who blasted the “vile and racist” video in an email to WISN.

“It’s vile, anti-police. Unbelievable, quite frankly, when I first saw it,” Nass said.

The senator is calling for a full investigation into the video and the students who helped to produce it.

“I think the school needs to do everything under their administrative rules. If it were up to me, Steve Nass, I’d kick them out of school, tell them goodbye. You’re wasting space for good students who want to obey the law and not incite violence,” Nass said.

UW-Madison, however, is more concerned about the school’s “inclusive environment” and vowed to protect Pickett’s free speech rights.

“UW-Madison strives to provide a welcoming and inclusive campus environment, while allowing everyone to share ideas and political views in exercise of their free speech rights. However, the university strongly condemns the glorification of violence such as that contained in the promotion of a student-produced clothing line,” university officials said in a prepared statement.

UW Police offered a similar response.

“We may not agree with the message, but we appreciate and respect people’s opinions and their right to free speech,” UW-Madison police spokesman Marc Lovicott told Channel 3000.

Nass has a different perspective.

“Is this free speech? This is not free speech when you’re inciting violence. This is like yelling fire in a crowded theater,” he said.