It’s a straight forward process. If you ignore a bill, a collection agency will hound you for a payment. It happens to millions of Americans every year.

But none quite as high-profile as the target of a collection initiated by the city of Albuquerque, New Mexico: Donald Trump’ 2020 campaign. Lorena Sanchez, a spokesperson for the city, said they’ve been sending un-returned bills to Mar-a-Lago for months.

The Hill explains:

The city of Albuquerque has referred a $211,175.94 bill for former President Trump’s reelection campaign rally in 2019 to a professional debt collection agency.

The outstanding invoice has remained unpaid since the event in nearby Rio Rancho. City officials covered the security costs of the then-president’s stay at a downtown Albuquerque hotel, The Albuquerque Journal reported Thursday.

The six-figure tab includes the costs of blocking off City Hall and parts of downtown, as well as overtime pay for police officers.

Appearing on The Daily Show, Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller, a Democrat, said Trump “should be getting these annoying voicemails ….‘You owe debts’…I think Mar-a-Lago is now getting those calls.”

Keller told KOB4 that he’s not optimistic about collecting the money. “Given what else has happened, I mean in terms of, even his own campaign owing money to donors and lots of shady stuff there, so unfortunately I don’t really expect us to get paid,” he said. “But it’s important that we do, and you know, we would do it for anyone else, so he’s no different.”

Keller is referring to a manipulative aspect of Trump’s fundraising – one-off donations were automatically made recurring – that eventually forced his campaign to return $122 million.

The Trump campaign maintains that the U.S. Secret Service is responsible for the bill, but The Hill points out:

Albuquerque is not the only city attempting to collect outstanding debts from the Trump campaign. City officials in El Paso, Texas, said in November that they are hiring legal counsel in their fight to obtain more than half a million dollars stemming from a February 2019 rally.