Clothes and handbags that look like prescription pill bottles or are covered in the likeness of pills, criticized for making light of drug addiction.

Nordstrom has caved to pressure and pulled a fashion line by high-end brand Moschino that was criticized for making light of drug addiction.

The line includes clothes and handbags that look like prescription pill bottles or are covered in the likeness of pills. The items are part of a Capsule line the Italian fashion brand introduced during New York’s 2016 Fashion Week They feature a $950 prescription pill bottle shoulder bag and a $795 print wool knit sweater.

“We appreciate all the constructive feedback we received from concerned customers and ultimately decided to remove the collection from our site and the three stores where we offered it,” a Nordstrom spokeswoman told Fortune. The retailer had earlier decided to keep carrying the line despite the outcry.

The Moschino line, which still sold at HBC’s Saks Fifth Avenue chain, has sparked protests and boycotts and was accused of being insensitive about the nation’s drug epidemic. Saks, which was actively promoting the items on Twitter on Friday, declined to comment to Fortune.

It’s the second time in a year Nordstrom has had to stop selling a line of clothes deemed offensive: In November, the store removed Faux Real’s ‘Chai Maintenance’ Hanukkah sweaters from its site and store shelves after angry customers saw it as playing on clichés about Jewish women.

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