A dating site recently put up a billboard in South Austin that urges women in the country illegally to "get a sugar daddy" and avoid deportation.

The site, arrangementfinders.com, advertises itself as a service that "connects men and women looking for mutually beneficial arrangements." Fox 7 in Austin reports that men on the site pay a monthly fee, while women sign up for free.

The site's controversial ad was posted Oct. 14 and is expected to stay up for four weeks, according to the station.

It turns out the billboard wasn't wanted in several locations — including Dallas.

"We had a couple approvals, but we got a lot more denials," said Jacob Webster, chief marketing officer for arrangementfinders.com. "All the major markets in terms of Los Angeles, San Diego, Phoenix and Dallas denied us."

Webster told KEYE-TV that he decided to run the ad in response to Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's claim that he'd deport 11 million immigrants in the country illegally.

Webster also told several stations that a third of the company's users are Hispanic women, which factored into the company's ad.

"How could we speak to this growing demographic for this site in a way where we could get the max effect?" he told Fox 7.

Thomas Esparza Jr., an Austin-based lawyer who specializes in immigration and nationality law, told Fox 7 that arrangementfinders.com is encouraging people to commit a federal felony: marriage fraud.

"It's insulting to foreign nationals who are in the removal process," Esparza said. "It presumes that foreign nationals are going to commit a crime, or are more willing to commit a crime, and that they're going to go to a website to participate in committing that crime."

But Webster said there's no reason to take it down.

"There's a demand for this sort of thing, as we're getting X amount of sign-ups due to the fact that this billboard is up," he said.