STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Her alleged thieving ways weren't one shop's cup of tea.

Dana Williamson -- who was labeled the "Tip Jar Bandit" by the NYPD on Twitter and was sought by police in connection with at least one theft of a gratuity bucket on Staten Island -- was arrested Tuesday at a Manhattan tea shop and charged with the same crime.

A spokesman for the NYPD said police picked up the 27-year-old at Kung Fu Tea on Greenwich Street.

Police allege she is also the woman who stole a tip jar from a poke restaurant on E. 36 Street on Saturday.

Police were searching for Williamson on Staten Island in at least one incident after several surveillance videos of apparent tip-jar thefts at borough establishments began circulating on social media.

The 123rd Precinct published a wanted flier of Williamson in connection to the tip-jar theft at M&M Deli and Bagels in Annadale on Jan. 13.

However, several other local businesses also sent the Advance surveillance footage of a nearly identical woman stealing tip jars.

Hawaii Poke Bowl in Graniteville provided the Advance with surveillance footage that shows someone resembling Williamson removing the store's tip jar by covering it with her scarf on Jan. 16.

In the latest video obtained by the Advance, a woman can be seen removing a tip jar at Country Donuts at 3235 Richmond Ave. in the Greenridge Shopping Plaza.

A woman resembling Williamson, whose last known address is in Concord, was also caught on camera taking tip jars off the counters of an Annadale deli and Willowbrook diner.

Cops at the 123rd Precinct tweeted Wednesday night that the woman arrested in Manhattan was the same person sought on Staten Island.

Great job by PO’s Metelus and Cassara of @NYPD1Pct, nabbing the Tip Jar Bandit in the act. Her multi boro crime spree has been brought to an end. pic.twitter.com/LDOImiFbtn — NYPD 123rd Precinct (@NYPD123Pct) February 7, 2018

As of Wednesday night, police have charged Williamson with two counts of petit larceny and one count of criminal possession of stolen property in connection with the two Manhattan incidents.

The police spokesman said she would not be charged with the Staten Island incidents until her Manhattan charges are processed.