CLEVELAND, Ohio — “Kent State gun girl” Kaitlin Bennett, who gained notoriety after posting graduation photos posing with an AR-10 in 2018, got into a brief confrontation with a woman at the International Women’s Day March in Cleveland on Sunday.

Bennett said during an interview with cleveland.com that she went to the march to see if participants would be supportive of “women who don’t think exactly like them.” She said hoped see if they would be supportive of women who favor Second Amendment rights and being anti-abortion. She gained attention after hosting a 2018 gun walk at Kent State University, and was recently confronted by a large group of protesters on Ohio University’s campus.

Bennett approached a woman who then accused Bennett’s fiancé of wearing a white supremacist symbol. Bennett told cleveland.com the words printed on her fiancé’s sweatshirt, “Deus Vult,” was a Catholic symbol.

The phrase, meaning “God Wills,” was used by Christian Knights in the first Crusades, according to the History Channel. The medieval saying was worn by some white supremacists during the 2017 nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Va., where one counter-protester was killed and dozens others were injured, according to the site.

White supremacists started using medieval symbols and dressing up as crusaders at their rallies, horrifying scholars, according to an NPR story. Racists have used the phrase “Deus Vult” online, according to the report.

“That’s a white supremacists symbol,” the woman said to Bennett, of the sweatshirt.

“Why would Amazon sell that then?” Bennett replied.

“Wow, that’s a really good question,” the woman replied.

The march, where dozens of people gathered to mark International Women’s Day downtown, was otherwise conflict-free.