Officials in Sunland Park, Arizona are threatening a landowner with arrest for failing to appear at a court hearing on a large border wall constructed on his property with the city’s approval.

Court officials told KFOX 14 that George Cudahy, owner of the American Eagle Brick Factory, faces a criminal summons after failing to show up to court on an unspecified charge Wednesday night, presumably related to the construction of a half-mile steel wall along his property bordering Mexico.

The city of sunland park New Mexico is now threatening an elderly veteran who had the wall built on his property. They can’t touch @WeBuildtheWall and they ignore the crisis in their town. Where are their priorities? https://t.co/V9vUVERngb — Brian Kolfage (@BrianKolfage) June 20, 2019

“The court wouldn’t tell KFOX 14 the specific charge Cudahy is facing, but it comes with a $500 fine, which is the highest amount the municipal court is legally allowed to charge,” according to the news site. “The city of Sunland Park will be filing a criminal summons, meaning if Cudahy misses his next hearing, the city will arrest him.”

The roughly $8 million border wall project was funded by We Build The Wall, an organization that raised well over $20 million through a GoFundMe campaign to bring President Trump’s signature campaign promise to life.

We Build The Wall worked with Cudahy and others to erect the structure this month, but the project faced a series of issues with city officials, who approved the project, then halted the project, then ultimately approved the permit for the wall.

The private border wall also ran into issues with the International Boundary and Water Commission, a government organization that manages the border, including access to Monument One – a marker near adjacent to the Brick Factory property where Mexico, New Mexico and Texas meet.

The construction crew at the site locked an access gate to Monument One to keep people out while the concrete cured for the barrier, but commission officials intervened and locked the gate open, essentially negating the whole point of the border wall.

Brian Kolfage, We Build The Wall’s outspoken founder and a disabled war veteran, has repeatedly documented illegal immigrants crossing at the site with videos posted to Twitter, including evidence of armed cartel escorts helping the migrants cross.

Kolfage has also went after the Commission and its public relations representative for perpetuating falsehoods in the media, including claims the gate was locked shut when it wasn’t, that We Build The Wall didn’t ask permission to build the gate, and other lies.

On Thursday, Kolfage turned his attention to the City of Sunland Park, and it’s case against the property owner.

“They city of Sunland Park New Mexico is now threatening an elderly veteran who had the wall built on his property. They can’t touch @WeBuildtheWall and they ignore the crisis in their town,” he posted to Twitter. “Where are their priorities?”

Focusing on the property owner, rather than the criminal illegal aliens using his property as a superhighway, doesn’t make sense, he wrote.

The city of sunland park is threatening the elderly veteran who owns the property of our wall, but they ignore this? What scumbags. Stand up and admit you have a problem like other mayors have. It’s the first step to recovery in your addiction to ruining our country. pic.twitter.com/BDtPKRL5nr — Brian Kolfage (@BrianKolfage) June 20, 2019

“What scumbags,” Kolfage posted, along with a video of cartel members escorting illegals into the U.S. “Stand up and admit you have a problem like other mayors have. It’s the first step to recovery in your addiction to ruining our country.”