A rock shattered the window of a Mission District tattoo shop that has been the target of a graffiti campaign after it became known that the shop owner’s boyfriend was a Donald Trump supporter.

The Form 8 tattoo parlor at 3049 22nd St. at Shotwell Street had a large rock thrown through one of its windows between Thursday night and Friday morning. A window facing Shotwell was broken, shards of glass pointing outward from the shop. The rock presumably used for the deed was on the floor inside, surrounded by fragments.

Ben Volt, the shop’s co-owner, said an employee had opened the shop on Friday and discovered the rock inside. He spent the day cleaning and repairing the damage, he said, adding that he had not yet filed a police report.

The vandalism against the shop, he said, was misplaced.

“None of us in the shop are voting for Trump and we’re not Nazis,” Volt said. “There’s a lot of people telling us what we are, but not a lot of people asking us what we are.”

Last month, the tattoo shop was vandalized with graffiti reading “Fuck Trump” and “KHY,” an acronym for “Keep Hoods Yours” and also the name of a social media user who has been posting pictures of the tagged shop and first discovered the Trump connection.

The user denied that they had anything to do with the previous graffiti and that they only posted pictures they received in messages.

Keep Hoods Yours first posted that Johnny Wilk, the boyfriend of shop co-owner Ben Volt, had an active Instagram account that enthusiastically praised Trump and was harshly critical of Hillary Clinton, comparing her to Hitler at times and seemingly advocating for her imprisonment.

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Another post featured the Theodore Roosevelt quote: “Every immigrant who comes here should be required within five years to learn English or to leave the country.”

At the time, Wilk was working part-time at Form 8 manning the front desk. After the September graffiti incident, Volt said he was let go.

Volt said it was unfortunate Wilk’s actions were still haunting the shop.

“This is not who we are,” he said. “We’re being misrepresented by one bad employee.”

Volt also removed the tattoo shop’s logo, which Keep Hoods Yours and others on social media said was reminiscent of a swastika. The placard hanging outside the tattoo shop with the logo has been painted over white, and Volt told Mission Local last month he would change it.