A New York woman was arrested over the weekend, along with a man from Florida, for swiping mementos — including teddy bears, plaques and pinwheels — from a memorial site honoring those killed in the Parkland massacre, a report says.

The alleged theft took place on Sunday night around 10 p.m., leaving local officials stunned.

“It’s completely disgusting,” said Broward County Commissioner Michael Udine.

“It’s sickening to me, especially in light of the fact that everybody has tried to treat every aspect of this with so much dignity and respect,” he told the Sun-Sentinel. “So gross.”

Kara M. O’Neil, 37, of Fulton, NY, and Michael Shawn Kennedy, 40, of Hollywood, Fla, were busted Sunday with an array of items from the Parkland memorial site — located outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where 17 people were killed on Feb. 14 in a mass shooting.

Their haul included numerous tokens of kindness and remembrance left behind by students and victims’ families, according to police.

“The subjects had no permission or authority to remove items and damage the monument for the deceased,” cops said in the arrest reports. “The subjects were at the monument at an unreasonable hour and maliciously intended to damage the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School monument.”

Witnesses reportedly told Broward County police that they saw Kennedy and O’Neil taking the mementos from the memorial Sunday night.

“That whole monument is just to honor [those who died],” explained Sari Kaufman, a 15-year-old Stoneman Douglas student who shared classes with victim Alyssa Alhadeff, 14.

“I’m kind of speechless,” she told the Sentinel. “It’s kind of like stealing from them, their families and our whole community.”

O’Neil and Kennedy were arrested and charged with suspicion of removing or disfiguring a tomb or a monument, which is a felony offense. They were both arraigned Monday and held on $1,000 bond.

Kennedy is reportedly a convicted felon who has served time for burglary and assault on a police officer. He spoke on his own behalf in court and claimed that he was being accused of a crime he didn’t commit.

“I feel the charging document has insufficient facia elements,” Kennedy said. “It is neither a tomb nor a monument.”

The judge in the case disagreed, though, and said state law also protected memorials.