Bill Clinton was heckled Wednesday afternoon in Canton, Ohio, by a woman holding a sign reading, "Bill Clinton is a rapist."

The protester shouted during the former president's address, "Bill Clinton has harmed women!"

"He has raped women!" she continued. "Bill Clinton is a rapist!"

Irate members of the audience quickly drowned out the anti-Clinton demonstrator, who held up her sign so that it obscured local news cameras' view of the former president, with shouts of "Get out!" The protester was escorted out soon thereafter by staff.

In response to the demonstration, Clinton told the crowd, "Don't worry about that."

"I'll tell you one thing: I love it when people come to my rallies," he said. "And it's a dead giveaway when they don't want to have a conversation because they know they will lose the conversation."

Clinton then posed a hypothetical to the audience and those who protest him and Democratic nominee's Hillary Clinton's candidacy, "Are you looking for answers or do you just want to be angry?"

America's 42nd president has admitted in the past to engaging in extramarital affairs with multiple women, including former White House intern Monica Lewinsky and former model Gennifer Flowers. Bill Clinton has also been accused of sexual assault.

In 1993, a former Arkansas state employee, Paula Jones, accused Clinton of luring her into his hotel room two years prior and sexually harassing her. A federal judge in Little Rock, Ark., threw out Jones' case in 1998.

Separately, a former White House volunteer aide, Kathleen Wiley, accused Clinton of groping her in 1993. An independent counsel said in a report in 2002 that, "there was insufficient evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that President Clinton's testimony regarding Kathleen Wiley was false."

The counsel declined to prosecute Clinton and the case was closed.

Separately, a former Arkansas nursing home administrator, Juanita Broaddrick, claims Bill Clinton sexually assaulted her in a hotel room in 1978.

"I was 35 when Bill Clinton Raped me and Hillary tried to silence me. I am now 73. It never goes away," she said on social media in January.

Broaddrick's story appeared first in the final weeks of the 1992 presidential election, where the country's leading newsrooms, including the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, ignored it.

Later, when the Monica Lewinsky affair hit the White House in 1998, Broaddrick's allegations resurfaced. Though she signed a sworn affidavit that year denying her claim against Clinton, she later denied the denial.

Broaddrick then restated her story in an NBC News interview taped on Jan. 20, 1999, one day after the president was impeached over the Lewinsky scandal. NBC held onto the interview for 35 days, and aired it shortly after Clinton was acquitted.

On Jan. 6, 2016, months after Hillary Clinton launched her presidential campaign, the alleged rape victim resurfaced to repeat her charge against the former president.

Bill Clinton "was, and probably still is, a sexual predator," Broaddrick said last month on a Twitter account that has been verified as belonging to her, adding that Hillary Clinton "has always lied and covered up for him."