At a courthouse square rally Sunday in Scottsboro, Frances Taylor spoke in support of Roy Moore after an invitation from organizers, in part, because she is a woman.

That was the rally's sales pitch from Chris Cox, the founder of Bikers for Trump - the event organizers whose rumbling motorcycles shattered the quiet of the largely deserted downtown area on a warm December afternoon.

Taylor's voice, Cox said before the rally, held special significance in light of the allegations of sexual misconduct made against Moore. Taylor is the president of the Alabama Federation of Republican Women.

Moore has repeatedly denied the allegations.

"We're the ones who have worked with him," Taylor said in an interview after the rally. "We have been in the campaign office with him. We've been in the chambers. We worked with him when he was on the (Alabama) Supreme Court. We have worked with him, we have been at church with him. We feel like we know him. He's not a stranger to us.

"This accusation doesn't fall in line with what we've seen and believed."

About 125 people attended the rally - most arriving on motorcycles - and virtually all supporting Moore in his bid to win the Alabama Senate special election on Dec. 12 against Democrat Doug Jones.

Moore was invited to attend and apologized in advance for his absence in a Sunday morning phone call, Cox said. Moore was campaigning in the southern part of the state on Sunday, Cox said, though his campaign announced no public events for Sunday.

Both Jones and Moore spoke at churches on Sunday morning while Jones took part in a fish fry in Tuscaloosa on Sunday afternoon.

"We're not going to use the pulpit to put people down. We're going to bring people together to talk about the issues." - Beulah Baptist Church pic.twitter.com/7IAaM1lVUV — Doug Jones (@DougJones) December 3, 2017

A lone protestor attended the rally. Jenni Carter of Scottsboro, who said she was a Democrat supporting Jones, stood among the Trump supporters holding a "No Moore" sign above her head during the rally.

She caught the eye of state Rep. Ed Henry, another of the rally's speakers.

"Mitch McConnell is here today," Henry said from the stage. "Did y'all know it? He's got a sign right here that says 'No Moore.'"

He pointed at Carter as he spoke.

Henry also took the opportunity to criticize McConnell, the Senate majority leader who has said he believes Moore's accusers and called on him to exit the race. On Sunday, though, McConnell appeared to soften his position on Moore.

"I promise you, Mitch McConnell, the Democrats, the establishment Republicans, they do not want Roy Moore in Washington D.C. because they know full well he is going to be a light, a bright light, a very bright light in Washington D.C.," Henry said. "They will not be able to hide and he will expose them for the traitors and the cowards that they are."

After the rally, Henry tweeted a photo of Carter standing next to another female, who held a poster board that said, "He may be a pedophile but at least he's racist, right?"

In his tweet of the picture, Henry posted, "I bet the press makes it out like these people mattered."

I bet the press makes it out like these people mattered. pic.twitter.com/fFmQF7kDR2 — Ed Henry (@Ed_Henry_HD9) December 3, 2017

"I am against Roy Moore," Carter said. "I do not believe he ought to be in the Senate. It's not a Republican or a Democratic problem. It's the fact that he's a liar. He hides behind his Bible. He goes upon his moral principles - he does not have any moral principles. Anybody who is a sexual predator does not belong representing the state of Alabama."

As Carter spoke with reporters, Gerald Miller of Jackson County stood about 20 feet away and shouted, "Democrat baby killer!"

Miller cited his opposition to abortion as cause for his protest of her protest.

"She can protest all she wants to," he said. "She has the right as an American. But she's a baby killer. All Democrats are baby killers. They believe in the baby-killing Democratic Party."

The brief conflict lasted only a few seconds before the rally began and never escalated to any level of concern. Scottsboro police provided security at the rally.

Also attending the rally was Tony Goolesby, an organizer of Moore's rally last week in Henagar who was caught on video shoving a cameraman attempting to video Moore's arrival. Miller said Goolesby was his cousin.

From the stage, both Taylor and Henry made the case for voters to go to the polls and cast their support for Moore.

Afterward, asked if she could understand hesitancy to vote for Moore in the aftermath of the allegations, Taylor said those allegations do not equate with the Roy Moore she knows.

"I understand that terrible things happen to people," she said. "I absolutely understand and I support those men and women who have had something terrible happen to them. But that is not the person we have worked with. It's not as if we've worked with him for a year or two years. We've had 30 years with him and that is a substantial block of time.

"It's hard to take that and say, there's that (dismissing years of knowledge of Moore because of the allegations). The fear is once that sort of thing happens, then everybody becomes guilty - everybody. And that's not the person we see, that's not the person that we know."