SAN ANTONIO – Two San Antonio 10th graders face “appropriate action” from school officials over an English class skit about assassinating President-elect Donald Trump that outraged parents.

Two sophomores at Marshall High School performed the skit titled “The Assassination of Donald Trump” in an English class last week that featured gunfire sound effects as one of the boys shot the other portraying Trump, the San Antonio Express-News reports.

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Parents of one of the students in the class raised concerns about the routine and are now calling on school officials to suspend the students and reprimand their teacher.

Northside Independent School District spokesman Barry Perez told the news site Marshall administrators took “appropriate action” against the unnamed students and teacher. But parents Harold and Melinda Bean are outraged because the students who participated in the production were back in class on Monday.

“Honestly I have run out of words to describe how angry I am and how shocked I am that they’re still in school today,” Melinda Bean said.

She pointed to cases of young students facing suspension for simulating guns with their hands, and questioned why the Marshall High School students are treated differently.

Northside ISD superintendent Brian Woods issued a prepared statement about the incident that alleges the teacher stopped the controversial performance immediately once she realized it was inappropriate. He said students changed the script after they submitted their project for the teacher’s approval.

“The teacher had no idea this change had occurred until the students began to perform this in the classroom,” Woods wrote.

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Northside ISD “does not condone the action of these students or anyone else who would threaten violence,” he wrote.

The Beans acknowledge that the teacher apologized for the incident, but contend it’s “a bunch of BS” that she took quick action to end the show. Harold Bean said the teacher should have killed the performance as soon as she heard its title, according to the New York Daily News.

“I don’t understand how the teacher can repeat an apology and be right there back at work Monday morning,” he told the Express-News. “Though we understand she is apologetic, it doesn’t make the situation right.”

The Daily News reports:

This is at least the third time since Trump’s White House victory that someone has run into trouble for intimating his assassination.

An Ohio man, Zachary Benson, faces federal charges for tweeting on Election Day that killing Trump was his “life goal.”

“My life goal is to assassinate Trump. Don’t care if I serve infinite sentences. That man deserves to decease existing (sic),” Benson tweeted, according to a criminal complaint.

He faces up to five years in prison if convicted for the now-deleted tweets.

Last week, the CEO of cybersecurity startup Packetsled resigned after vowing violence against Trump.

“I’m going to kill the President Elect. Bring it secret service,” Matt Harrigan wrote in a Facebook post he later said he believed to be private. No charges have been announced against him.