A deputy in South Carolina will no longer be able to be a law enforcement officer after stealing, defacing a victim’s property and using it to write a racial slur.

Kaleb Broome, a former deputy in Richland County, pleaded guilty to destroying an individual’s private property this week, reports WLTX, more than two years after being fired over the incident.

While responding to a domestic violence call in February 2016, Broome allegedly took a poster of Africa from the victim’s garage and used a roll of tape to make the word “Nigeria” printed on the poster look like a racial slur.

Broome was swiftly fired and charged over the incident in March 2016. “He tarnished the badge that we wear,” Sheriff Leon Lott said at the time.

This week, Broome reached an agreement with prosecutors that involved him pleading guilty to maliciously injuring private property. As part of the deal, Broome will not be able to receive law enforcement certification in the state of South Carolina. The agreement will also be filed in a national law enforcement database.