A Jewish woman claims police officers in Sweden blatantly doctored her identification photo to give her an anti-Semitic “hooked nose.”

Annika Hernroth-Rothstein, 38, said she went to a Stockholm police station to take a photo for her ID but was shocked when she was handed the new card with what appeared to an altered nose, Metro UK reported.

“I did a double-take when I got the ID but I actually left with it and didn’t say anything because I felt really scared and uncomfortable,” Hernroth-Rothstein told the outlet.

Hernroth-Rothstein said it’s likely that the officers were aware that she was Jewish since she was wearing a Star of David, the newspaper reported. She also handed over employment papers to them from an Israeli newspaper and has a Jewish last name.

Hooked noses have been invoked for centuries as an anti-Semitic trope for Jewish people.

After consulting a friend, she decided that she should file a complaint over the distorted photo, the report said.

“As a Jew, sometimes you’re scared to sound the alarm on these things because inevitably people will say ‘that’s a technical error’ or ‘you Jews are seeing anti-Semitism everywhere,’ but this seems pretty blatant,” she said.

Swedish authorities acknowledged that it’s possible to manipulate the digital photos and said they’re investigating Hernroth-Rothstein’s allegations, Metro UK reported.

“We will, of course, take a closer look at the matter and we, therefore, ask the person to contact us as soon as possible,” Magnus Roglert of the Swedish Police Authority told the newspaper.