BRUNSWICK, Ga. – A Georgia high school student was harassed and chased by his classmates for coming to class with a Trump hat, shirt and flag on the day after Donald Trump’s historic election win last week.

The Glynn County School System on Tuesday issued a prepared statement about the Nov. 9 incident involving an unnamed student at Glen Academy, who was chased through the center of campus by several students after class was dismissed for the day, The Brunswick News reports.

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The student told administrators he was walking with his Trump hat, shirt and flag when a student attempted to snatch the flag away. The student Trump supporter walked away quickly and several students went after him.

“Others followed when they saw the students running,” according to the school statement cited by the News.

An assistant principal intervened and “disbanded the group,” but escorted the Trump supporting student to the principal, who met with the student’s parents and convinced them to agree to terms.

“At the suggestion of the principal, all parties agreed that the student would not bring the flag back to school and would wait until after Christmas break to wear the Trump hat and/or Trump t-shirt,” the statement read.

“The student did report that he felt threatened,” the statement continued. “The school is still investigating to see if verbal threats were made toward the student.”

The student, who had brought his Trump flag to school before, was not harmed or disciplined as part of the ordeal, other than the special dress code agreement, WTLV reports.

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Glenn County Schools Police Chief Rod Ellis told The News the incident is the first he’s aware of stemming from Donald Trump’s historic upset victory over Democratic challenger Hillary Clinton last week.

“I stay pretty connect to the campus safety community, and I’ve seen some incidents around where there was ugliness here or there,” he said. “But this is the first thing we’ve had here.”

Ellis said the incident prompted him to discuss the right way to handle similar situations with the district’s school resource officers.

“This is not something that law enforcement officers deal with every single day, especially on a campus,” he said. “The last thing we want is to violate somebody’s constitutional rights, on any side of the issue.”

It’s unclear what, if any, potential discipline school officials may impose on the students who harassed and chased their classmate.