Police in Alabama have arrested four black men in connection with the beating of a white Alabama high school student who had posted pro-Blue Lives Matter Comments in support of cops.

In a statement, Sylacauga Police Chief Kelley Johnson says four recent Sylacauga High School students were arrested Tuesday following the September 30 attack against 17-year-old Brian Ogle.

Ogle's mother, Brandi Allen, says her son responded to students wearing Black Lives Matter T-shirts at his school with Blue Lives Matter. He was hospitalized with serious head injuries.

Suspects arrested: Quartez Walker, 20 (left), and Bobby Brown, 19 (right), were arrested at Stillman College Tuesday in the September 30 attack on an Alabama teenager

'Accomplices': Daveon Nix, 20 (left), was arrested in Sylacauga, while La Noah Ealy Jr (right), 18, was arrested at Auburn University in Montgomery

Victim: Brian Ogle, 17, is being treated for injuries at a hospital in Birmingham, Alabama, after he was assaulted in the parking lot of an Ace hardware store in Sylacauga in September

Two of the four suspects, 20-year-old Quartez Walker and 19-year-old Bobby Brown, were taken into custody at Stillman College.

La Noah Ealy Jr, 18, was arrested at Auburn University in Montgomery, while 20-year-old Daveon Nix was arrested in Sylacauga.

Walker was booked on a first-degree assault charge and his bond was set at $20,000.

The other three suspects face charges of second-degree assault and are being held on $15,000 each.

Talladega County District Attorney Steve Giddens said Walker was charged with a more serious criminal count because he believes the 20-year-old man was the only one in the group who was armed with a gun, which he allegedly used to strike Ogle.

Suspect Daveon Nix is the son of a newly elected local councilwoman, Tiffany Nix.

Just days before her son's arrest, Councilwoman-elect Nix, representing Sylacauga District 2, addressed the subject of racial tensions in the city in general, and the attack on Brian Ogle in particular, in an interview with The Daily Home, saying, in part, that parents should set a good example for their children.

Mom: Daveon Nix is the son of Sylacauga Councilwoman-elect Tiffany Nix (pictured together). He has been charged with second-degree assault

Serious charge: Walker (left and right) was booked on a first-degree assault charge and his bond was set at $20,000. Prosecutors believe he was the only suspect who was armed

'If we’re upholding them in their wrongdoings, then we are as much to blame as they are,' she said at the time.

In the wake of the arrests, Brian Ogle's mother lamented that the bonds for her son's accused assailants were set too low.

'I mean, obviously, people get charged with lesser crimes every day and their bonds are way higher than this,' Brandi Allen told the station WSFA Tuesday.

In an interview with Al.com, Mrs Allen added that she thought the quartet of suspects should have been charged with attempted murder.

La Noah Ealy (left) and Bobby Brown (right) face charges of second-degree assault and are being held on $15,000 each

Mom's complaint: The victim's mother lamented that the bonds for her son's accused assailants, among them Bobby Brown (left) and Quartez Walker (right), were set too low

The mother said Brian's condition has improved enough to have him moved out of the ICU into a regular hospital room.

Police Chief Johnson said he does not expect any additional arrests in the case.

On September 30, police found Brian Ogle bleeding from his head near an Ace hardware store after his school's homecoming football game.

He was immediately airlifted to a hospital in nearby Birmingham to be treated for three skull fractures as well as injuries to his shoulders, the Daily Caller reported.

Brandi Allen told WBRC at the time she believed her son was a target because of videos he posted on his Facebook account which expressed support for the Blue Lives Matter movement.

Blue Lives Matter is a response to the Black Lives Matter protests which erupted nationwide in the wake of a spate of police-involved killings of African-Americans.

Ogle's (right) mother, Brandi Allen (left), says that she believes her son was targeted because of Facebook messages he posted in support of the Blue Lives Matter movement

Ogle was not shy about expressing his support for law enforcement and criticizing the Black Lives Matter movement, which was formed in response to police-involved shootings

Ogle's mother said that her son began to receive threats from people at school after he made the posts, though school administrators said there was nothing they could do

Ogle's Facebook account is replete with images and messages meant to convey support for law enforcement.

'Instead of us planning for his 18th birthday, we're here [near the hospital],' said Allen. 'Why? Because he made a statement that he backs the blue?

'I'm still trying to understand how someone, no matter the color of their skin, can do this to another human being.'

She said that her son began receiving threatening messages from schoolmates who were unhappy over his Facebook posts.

It is believed Ogle, left, pictured with his mother Brandi, right, was pistol-whipped

It is believed some of the threats Ogle received were from his school mates

Allen also blamed school officials for not adequately protecting her son after he had notified them of the threats he was receiving.

'My son took it to the principal at Sylacauga High School and I commend him for that. He showed her the threats that were being made to him, but she told him there was nothing she could do. I'm appalled,' Allen explained.