Aaron Schlossberg, who went viral for his rant against people speaking Spanish earlier this week, was kicked out of his office.

He's having a bad week.

His fellow lawyers mocked him, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio subtweeted him, and a city official is calling for his disbarment.

Since the viral video emerged Wednesday, more people have come forward with stories of racist incidents that involve him.

The Manhattan attorney who went on a racist rant that went viral earlier this week has been locked out of his office building.

Corporate Suites, which operates 275 Madison Avenue, where Aaron Schlossberg had his law firm, told the New York Post that he's no longer welcome.

"We have terminated his services agreement with us," Hayim Grant, the president of Corporate Suites, said. "His actions are just not consistent with our community and rules and regulations … It’s totally contrary to everything we believe in as a company and personally."

Schlossberg is having a bad week. It all started Wednesday when a video went viral of him threatening to call U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement because two employees spoke Spanish in a restaurant.

"My guess is they're undocumented, so my next call is to ICE to have each one of them taken out of my country," Schlossberg said in a confrontation with the manager of Hello Kitchen, which is near his office building. "If they have the balls to come here and live off my money — I pay for their welfare. I pay for their ability to be here."

Attorneys at the Supreme Court of Long Island City, where Schlossberg represents clients, mocked him on Thursday, according to the New York Post.

"I was taken aback that he would have the balls to come to court in front of all of his colleagues after his crazy outburst," one attorney told the Post.

"Why would he do that? His reputation will be shot. What a dope!" said another.

And it gets worse.

Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. called for Schlossberg to be disbarred. Along with Congressman Adriano Espaillat, he filed a complaint to the state court system's disciplinary committee. If the complaint has merit, court system guidelines say, the court can either "sanction, censure, suspend, or recommend disbarment" for Schlossberg.

New York City Mayor Bill de Belasio appeared to subtweet Schlossberg, saying that New Yorkers speak all sorts of languages.

—Bill de Blasio (@NYCMayor) May 16, 2018

And on Thursday, Schlossberg either called the police when he's seen reporters or ran away from them.

—NBC New York (@NBCNewYork) May 17, 2018

People have also flooded his Facebook and Yelp pages with negative reviews. Google now suggests his law firm is a Mexican restaurant.

In the past week, more stories of racist incidents with Schlossberg have emerged.

Willie Morris, a consultant from Massachussets, filmed a confrontation from 2016 where Schlossberg called him an "ugly f---ing foreigner."

"I was so shocked, I've lived in NYC for five years and have never had anything like this happen," Morris told CNN. "I was waiting for someone to jump out and scream, 'Gotcha!'"

In a video obtained by Vice, Schlossberg wore a "Make America Great Again" hat at an April 2017 pro-President Trump rally in New York City and said immigrants should be thankful to him. Schlossberg donated $500 to Trump's presidential campaign.

"You should just say 'Thank you for letting me in your motherf---ing country,'" he said. "You care about America because you need America, so f--- you... You’re goddamn welcome for letting you in here. You’re welcome."

A year later, Schlossberg screamed at someone on a Subway saying "go home, we don’t want you here, you’re what's ruining America," a woman told BuzzFeed News.

"I was so enraged that I didn’t do that and I began to go off at him saying, 'this is hate speech, I can’t believe I have to listen to this. What’s wrong with you? You’re out of your mind,'" the woman, who identieif herself only as "Annie," said.

Schlossberg hasn't responded to INSIDER's requests for comment.