Author: Patrick Reilly, New York Post; Translated by: Wuzhu, Golden Finance

Vice President Kamala Harris was shot at her campaign office in Arizona, police said — just over a week after a second assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump.

The Tempe Police Department told The Washington Post that damage from multiple bullets was discovered shortly after midnight Monday at the Democratic National Committee campaign office near South Main Street and Priest Avenue in Tempe.

"No one was in the office overnight, but it raises concerns for the safety of those working in the building and those nearby," said public information officer Sergeant Ryan Cook.

Police said detectives are currently analyzing evidence collected at the scene and additional measures have been taken to enhance the safety of staff and others in the area.

Staff arrived at the office on Monday and reported gunfire that appeared to come from the front window.

This is the second time in two weeks that criminal damage has been reported to the office.

According to police, just after midnight on Sept. 16, the front window was shot with what appeared to be a BB or pellet gun.

No arrests have been made in either incident. Authorities are investigating all possible motives.

The shooting came after a second assassination attempt on Trump on Sept. 15 at his West Palm Beach golf course.

The gunman, 58-year-old Hawaii resident Ryan Ruth, was discovered by a Secret Service agent after he spotted the muzzle of a semiautomatic rifle sticking out of bushes near the sixth hole. The agent opened fire before Ruth had a chance to fire.

The man suspected in the stabbing dropped his rifle and fled in an SUV. He was arrested 40 minutes later.

Harris is scheduled to travel to Arizona for a campaign event on Friday — her second trip to the crucial swing state since clinching the nomination at the Democratic National Convention in August.

Her campaign did not disclose which city Harris will visit, AZCentral reported.

Polls show Harris and Trump nearly tied in Arizona with just six weeks until Election Day.

Trump defeated Hillary Clinton there in 2016, but President Biden turned the state Democratic in 2020, winning by fewer than 11,000 votes — the smallest margin of any U.S. state that year, AZCentral reported.