A Texas woman arrested after displaying an expletive-filled message for President Trump and his voters has a new target on her truck: the local sheriff.

Karen Fonseca, 46, posted an image of the latest display on the truck she shares with her husband on Sunday, three days after she was arrested on an outstanding fraud warrant issued in August by the Rosenberg Police Department. Fonseca, according to a Facebook post on Sunday, now has her sights set on Fort Bend County Sheriff Troy Nehls.

“Yeah … F–k Trump and f–k you for voting for him,” the rear-view window sticker reads, according to Fonseca’s post. “F–k Troy Nehls and f–k you for voting for him.”

The post, which has been shared more than 300 times, follows Nehls’ threat last week to prosecute Fonseca on disorderly conduct charges for “inciting immediate breach of the peace,” according to a since-deleted Facebook post citing Texas state law.

Nehls, a Republican considering a run for Congress, shared the image initially in hopes to identify its owner. He said a county prosecutor had agreed to seek disorderly conduct charges over the decal, but District Attorney John Healey said he didn’t think there was enough to go to court.

“I did not believe it was a prosecutable case based on the definition of disorderly conduct,” Healey told the Houston Chronicle.

Fonseca said she was merely exercising her “freedom of speech,” she told the newspaper.

“It’s not to cause hate or animosity,” she said.

Fonseca, who has since been released on bond, did not return a message seeking comment. She has said her husband owns the truck, but she often drives the vehicle they altered after Trump took office.

Nehls’ Facebook post also caught the eye of officials at the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas. The agency suggested that Fonseca contact attorneys there for help regarding what it said was a protected form of speech and referenced a 1971 US Supreme Court case that overturned the conviction of a man for disturbing the peace for wearing a jacket that read “F–k the Draft” to protest the Vietnam War.

Fonseca said she’s “almost certain” her arrest was connected to the decal targeting Trump.

“People abuse the badge, and in my opinion, money talks,” she told KHOU. “When you’re in politics, people know how to work the system.”

Nehls said his added mention to Fonseca’s rear window did not come as a shock.

“I’m not surprised,” Nehls told KHOU, calling the message “somewhat disgusting.”

Nehls will release a statement on Fonseca’s latest truck display later Monday, sheriff spokeswoman Caitlin Espinosa told The Post.