An Idaho school district is under fire after more than a dozen of its staffers dressed up as Mexican stereotypes — and a border wall — for Halloween.

Since deleted photos posted to Middleton School District’s Facebook page show Middleton Heights Elementary employees dressed in sombreros and ponchos while wearing fake mustaches and holding maracas.

A second group smiles as they hold pieces of cardboard painted like a brick wall, adorned with President Trump’s campaign slogan, “Make America Great Again.”

The images, according to Beth Almanza, an immigrant rights advocate in Idaho, were “heartbreaking.”

“Imagine how some of the students felt when they walked into their classrooms on Halloween and saw their teachers (people they look up to) dressed like this?” Almanza wrote on Facebook.

The district removed the snaps after parents complained that they were insensitive, according to KBOI in Boise.

“As a mother to a minority child, I would be mortified if this were my child’s teacher. They should be fired,” a parent told the station.

The district’s superintendent, Josh Middleton said in an apology video on Friday that he was “deeply troubled” by the decision by staffers to wear costumes “that are clearly insensitive and inappropriate … we are better than this.”

He continued: “Do I think there was a malicious intent in these poor decisions? No, I don’t. Was there a poor judgment involved? Absolutely.”

All 14 staffers have been put on paid leave, according to the superintendent, who added that “a member of the district’s crisis team would be taking over day-to-day principal duties at Middleton Heights for the time being.”