CINCINNATI, Ohio – Parents and politicians are demanding justice for an alleged “hate crime” at Cincinnati’s Withrow University High School after the campus was covered it hateful graffiti that referenced President Trump over the weekend.

Locals discovered the school building, signs, benches, sidewalks and other areas covered in spray-painted graffiti on Sunday, with messages that included “F*** Ni**ers,” “Trump,” swastikas and other obscene references to gays and blacks, the Cincinnati Enquirer reports.

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“It’s expected,” Alvin Harris, who found the graffiti while exercising at the school with his son Sunday. “I don’t expect anything less than I what I see in front of me.”

“People don’t know what to do with their spare time,” he said.

Parent Chanda Monroe-Williams and others believe the vandals targeted the school because 97 percent of the 1,260 students who attend classes there are not white.

“When you look at it, it becomes obvious, ‘Why this school,’” she said. “If you’re someone who’s looking to get some type of notoriety, what better school to target?”

The incident follows a similar stunt at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati earlier in January, as well as numerous documented hoax crimes at college campuses and other locations across the nation perpetuated by anti-Trump agitators.

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In late November, Philadelphia police arrested 58-year-old black man William Tucker for vandalizing numerous vehicles and homes with racist graffiti in an attempt to smear Trump and his supporters.

Tucker allegedly spray-painted “Trump Rules” and “Black B**ch” on a black woman’s car, as well as pro-Trump Nazi messages on a storefront in what mainstream media outlets quickly labeled a racist hate crime, Breitbart reports.

Tucker was ultimately charged with four counts of criminal mischief over the incident.

The Associated Press highlighted a similar stunt in Leland, Mississippi, where Andrew McClinton, a 45-year-old black man, allegedly spray painted “Vote Trump” on the wall outside Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church before setting the building on fire about a week before the 2016 election.

Also in November, a Latino student at Elon University was busted for scrawling “Bye Bye Latinos, Hasta La Vista” on a school whiteboard. School officials initially condemned the “reprehensible” incident, but later labeled it “satirical commentary” when they realized a Latino student penned the message, The College Fix reports.

Numerous other reports of alleged hate crimes and racist graffiti involving students at Northwestern University, Baruch College, the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, the University of Michigan, San Diego State University, the University of New Mexico and others later turned out to be hoaxes aimed at invoking a backlash against Trump supporters.

At Cincinnati’s Withrow High School, officials removed the graffiti, but parents and politicians are demanding justice with little evidence to go on.

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School officials said a suspect was caught on video wearing a face mask, and the person also spray-painted several security cameras, but police have not identified the culprit. The school is now providing students with counselors to help them heal from the hateful messages, WLWT reports.

“To do things like this, it’s cowardly, and it won’t be tolerated,” parent Alandes Powell told the news site. “I think with this year’s election, it actually opened a can of worms that was out there – that it was an embarrassment to feel racist and bigotry and to say it and now people almost made it like it’s OK.”

Cincinnati Public Schools issued a statement about the incident based on the assumption that it’s a legitimate hate crime.

“This unfortunate event is further evidence of our need to heal and grow as a community. If this awful act encourages anything, we hope that it sparks continued dialogue among families about our need to come together as one country. Our diversity is an asset and should be celebrated,” the statement read.

Local politicians also sounded off and are now calling on the attorney general to investigate the “hate crime.”

“It’s an act of evil, hatred and we will try to find who did this,” Mayor John Cranley said. “I am outraged by this act of hate at Withrow High School. I am saddened that the grounds where students walk each and everyday has been used as a platform for racism, anti-Semitism and bigotry.”

“Come in and see these symbols of hate … it’s unbelievable. You almost have to pinch yourself to say is this 2017?” State Rep. Alicia Reece, a Withrow alum, told WLWT.

Dozens of parents, students and community members also held a rally outside of Withrow before school on Monday to demand justice, WCPO reports.

“I want to mobilize our community — in that we’ll carry on with our day to day activities — We will not be deterred,” Cincinnati Public School Board President Erica Copeland-Dansby said.