James Tully walks five miles to work nearly every morning. These days he totes his identification around on a neck lanyard.

That's because he's been stopped by police more than 20 times in apparent cases of mistaken identity, he told the Pocono Record. Tully lives and works in the heart of the manhunt for Eric Frein, who is charged with opening fire outside the Blooming Grove state police barracks on Sept. 12, killing a trooper and seriously wounding another.

Tully said the stops were rather mundane until Friday, when he told The Pocono Record he was roughed up by an official.

The report reads:

"The only I.D. I saw was the barrel of the gun," Tully said.

"He yelled at me to get down on the ground with my arms out wide and he demanded my name."

Tully says he complied immediately and that the man drove his knee into Tully's back and continued to ask his name.

Tully told him his name over and over and explained that his identification was on the lanyard on his neck but that he was laying on it.

The law enforcement officer removed the bandana from Tully's head and then grabbed the lanyard and yanked it off his neck.

"Good thing it had a break away clasp or he would have choked me."

Read the full story here.