A woman driving in the area of First Avenue and High Street on Tuesday afternoon nearly was struck by a stray bullet that came through her car’s rear window and lodged in its roof as a gunman fired in excess of a dozen shots, city police said.

“She was not a target,” a police officer at the scene said.

Officers rushed to the intersection just before 2 p.m. and discovered evidence that at least 15 shots had been fired in the surrounding area.

In addition to the moving car, bullets struck two parked vehicles, “one along the south side of High Street and another that was in a lot” owned by the Williamsport Regional Medical Center, police Capt. Donald Mayes said in a prepared statement.

No one was injured, and the gunman remained at large, he said.

“There were multiple scenes” where bullets landed, an officer involved in the investigation said.

A section of High Street was cordoned off as investigators collected ballistics and other pieces of evidence as well as photographed the vehicles that were struck.

This was the second time in a week that police processed a shooting scene in the city.

A masked gunman got out of a vehicle and gunned down 31-year-old William Michael Blackwell in broad daylight on Friday afternoon just as Blackwell was picking up his car at Penn State Auto Repair at Boyd and Arch streets, police said.

Following the 3:15 p.m. shooting, Blackwell, of the 600 block of Wildwood Boulevard, was rushed to Williamsport Regional Medical Center and then flown to Geisinger Medical Center in Danville, where he was pronounced dead on arrival.

Police confirmed several shots were fired at Blackwell at close range. No arrest has been made in the case.

Blackwell, a convicted felon, was arrested last February on city police charges of allegedly shooting Antwan McClain at Park Avenue and Grier Street about 10:30 a.m. Oct. 29, 2015.

“Blackwell pulled up next to McClain’s vehicle, rolled down his window, pointed a firearm at McClain and fired the gun three times, striking McClain once in the upper torso,” according to court records.

McClain survived the shooting and Blackwell was taken into custody in Philadelphia more than three months later. However, the case collapsed when McClain disappeared and police were left without a victim.

Investigators said McClain was targeted because Blackwell got word that McClain reportedly was setting him up to be robbed.