Police in Fort Wayne, Indiana are shrugging their shoulders over a Donald Trump effigy hanging high in a tree in Fort Wayne, Indiana neighborhood, a stark contrast to reactions to similar stunts by those who opposed Obama in recent years.

Shortly after Trump’s inauguration, a U.S. Army veteran in the historic Oakdale neighborhood hoisted a life-sized Donald Trump effigy into a large tree in his front yard, where it continues to hang by a noose around its neck, WANE reports.

The life-sized doll is dressed in a suit, with what appears to be blood running down the front of its shirt, as well as orange feet and hands, which are affixed to a flag of the former Soviet Union, according to Fox 59.

Neighbors told reporters the home belongs to an Army veteran, and a banner on the home reads “Trump is a disgrace to America & makes me ashamed I ever served.” Several other anti-Trump signs, some vulgar, also decorate the home.

“It was kind of shocking,” neighbor Jared Paden told WANE. “Honestly, I don’t necessarily like it. I’m not really excited about it being in my neighborhood.”

A WANE reporter attempted to discuss the effigy with the homeowner on Sunday but no one answered the door.

“I don’t think it’s respectful to Trump and a lot of people that voted for him to be president,” Paden said. “I don’t think they should do it, but I think it’s their right. They have the right to free speech. So, I’m not going to say they have to take it down, but I wish they would.”

Fort Wayne Police spokesman Michael Joyner said the homeowner is protected by free speech rights, and there’s nothing officers can do about it.

The situation is concerning to Oakdale neighborhood association president Tom Tiernon, who told the news site he hopes the eyesore is gone before a scheduled neighborhood home tour in June.

“We’re all for free speech,” Tiernon wrote in a statement, “but we are concerned that a line has been crossed and about what to do next.”

The situation played out much differently than a similar ordeal involving an Obama effigy found hanging from a highway overpass in Missouri in 2014.

In that case, local officials shut down all four lanes of I-70 and called in a bomb squad to remove the dummy because it reportedly constituted a threat against the president, Mediaite reported at the time.

Political parade floats featuring Obama’s likeness also sparked claims of racism last summer.

Don Christy, a 73-year-old, resident of Sheridan, Indiana, sparked a public backlash and numerous media stories over his depiction of Obama in a makeshift toilet during last year’s Fourth of July Parade. Christy donned a blonde wig and prison jumpsuit while driving a golf cart rigged to look like a jail cell, with the Obama dummy riding in the back, the Indianapolis Star reported.

A picture of Christy’s float sparked an online firestorm, with accusations of racism and other vulgarities.

“The parade, it’s for kids. This is Independence Day,” Darryl Brownie told the Star. “It was just wrong.”

A Sheridan, Indiana resident faced the same type of backlash over a float critical of Obama in September.

Another effigy of Obama hung from an electronic billboard in Minnesota during election night 2010 ignited accusations of racism and police intervention, as well.

The Duluth chapter of the NAACP labeled the Obama effigy near the Miller Hill Mall a “terroristic threat” and “hate crime,” and likened the situation to crosses burned by the Klu Klux Klan, the Duluth News Tribune reported.

“I am troubled by the fact that at a time when America was electing, making history by giving a second term to an African American president … that someone would perpetrate this type of crime,” NAACP spokesman Claudie Washington said.

“I consider this a terroristic threat against the president of the United States as well as every African American in this state and in this country,” Washington said. “The persons who did this, I believe that’s what they had in mind: terrorizing people. As it was done by the KKK when they burn the cross or (when) they left the noose.”

Duluth police contacted the FBI and Secret Service, and held meetings with black community leaders, while detectives investigated the allegedly criminal act.

The Secret Service allegedly investigated Obama effigies in at least four other states in 2010, according to the news site.