As police continue their six-week manhunt to search for a suspect in the ambush of two Pennsylvania State Police troopers near the Pocono Mountains in eastern Pennsylvania, an Eric Frein look-alike who lives in the area seems to be creating much confusion for the cops due to his eerily similar features.

Since James Tully walks to and from work by crossing right through the manhunt area near Canadensis, he has allegedly been stopped more than 20 times by authorities who continuously mistake him to be Frein, the Pocono Record reported.

"Because I'm walking and I'm carrying a book bag, and for some reason people seem to think I'm the one they're looking for," Tully told ABC affiliate WNEP, adding that he's been stopped by police too many times to remember while walking five miles each way to work at a metal manufacturing factory.

"I've lost count after 20 in total," he said. "The most on one round trip stretch was about seven times."

So much so that James Tully was even ambushed at gunpoint and brutalized during one aggressive confrontation last week where cops demanded him to get on the ground, the 39-year-old recalled.

"He had his knee dug in my back to the point where I thought it was going to go through my spine and into the ground," Tully, who suffered bruised ribs, told the Allentown Morning Call. "I just thought to myself, 'Let me live through this.'"

Described to be a self-trained survivalist and war re-enactor, Frein has been spotted several times, with the latest sighting reported as recently as Sunday. But the suspect has been able to evade police capture in the five-square mile area due to his training and the thick terrain.

In order to differentiate himself from Frein, Tully has now started to wear his employer ID card around his neck and a reflective vest while walking to work.

"The one they're hunting for, he's not going to stand out," Tully said. "He's going to try and blend in. I want to stand out so I can let them know; look, I'm not the one they're looking for. Just let me go on my way."

On Sep. 12, Frein allegedly ambushed the Blooming Grover police barracks and shot at two Pennsylvania State troopers, eventually killing Cpl. Bryon Dickson and wounding Trooper Alex T. Douglass.

Over the six-week manhunt involving more than 1,000 officers in an area near the border of Pike and Monroe counties in eastern Pennsylvania, police said Frein has been "making errors" in his continued effort to hide from his pursuers, Post Standard Syracuse reported.

Meanwhile, an official comment about Tully's situation was not made by Pennsylvania State police, but they stated that he should file a complaint if he had felt mistreated.