Owner of house said that men threatened violence and were armed

A black child's birthday party in Georgia was interrupted by a group of men driving pickup trucks with Confederate flags who were allegedly armed and threatening violence.

Video of the incident showed at least seven trucks with both Confederate and American flags driving past the outraged party-goers in Douglasville on Saturday.

A woman who posted a second video says that one of the white truck drivers, who she alleged were armed, said he would 'kill y’all [N-words]'.

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Cell phone video shows a convoy of pickup trucks decorated with Confederate flags that arrived at the house of Melissa Alford (left) during a child's birthday party

Alford said on Facebook that one of the men said he would 'kill y'all n*****s' and they had a shotgun with them

'This is a child's birthday party,' someone is heard yelling at the men.

Melissa Alford, who said on Facebook that she lives in the house where the party was being held, said that the uninvited guests were armed with a shotgun when they arrived at the party.

'I'm too scared to go to sleep because these guys still have the gun in their possessions,' she said.

'I just want these people to stop terrorizing people,' Melissa posted later.

'I don't mind them riding with their flags but I don't want them going around threaten people in their yard like they did mine or harassing folks either'.

Douglasville police said that they were aware of the truck convoy and followed it for a while when it came into their jurisdiction but did not see 'any criminal or traffic infractions'.

They said that officers received 'conflicting statements' about what happened at the birthday party and arrested one of the truck passengers on an unrelated charge, according to the Atlanta Constitution Journal.

'This is a child's birthday party,' one person on the grass yelled towards the road. Police said they arrested one man on unrelated charges and were investigating whether anything criminal occurred

The department said they had no evidence of shots being fired, but were investigating whether any laws were broken.

Douglasville police did not return request for further comment Monday evening.

Late last year the department was sued by a former employee who said that he was fired twice for speaking up about racial profiling and racism, according to CBS 46.

The incident and prominent use of the Confederate flag comes amid renewed debate over the symbol, which was actually a flag of the secessionist Southern states' armies.

Some say that the flag, which featured prominently on the online profile of Charleston church shooter Dylann Roof, supports the legacy of white supremacists and slavery.