MANHATTAN, N.Y. — A man previously charged with attacking a woman with feces and spitting at a Jewish man has been arrested for the third time in just one month, police said.

Frank Abrokwa, 37, of the Bronx, was jailed Monday following an arraignment in Manhattan Criminal Court on criminal mischief charges after allegedly throwing a dumbbell through a ground-level window at a storage facility in Harlem over the weekend, according to the NYPD.

No one was injuried in the incident, police said. 

Authorities noted Abrokwa is the same man who was arrested earlier this month for attacking a woman with a bag of feces as she waited for a subway train at the Wakefield–241st Street station on Feb. 21.

He was charged with reckless endangerment, assault, menacing, harassment and disorderly conduct in connection with the attack and released on his own recognizance, according to authorities.

However, Abrokwa was arrested again just days later in connection with an alleged anti-Semitic hate crime that took place last fall.

In that incident, authorities said Abrokwa made anti-Jewish statements toward, and then spat on, a 46-year-old man who was in front of a building on Utica Avenue, between Park Place and Prospect Place in Crown Heights, on Sept. 9.

He was released following his second arrest, authorities noted.

Abrokwa has over 40 prior arrests dating back to 1999, according to law enforcement officials.

His repeated releases drew sharp criticism from Mayor Eric Adams, who highlighted Abrokwa’s alleged crimes to show “the scope of changes that we need to make in order to keep New Yorkers safe.”

"It is the result of a failed mental health system, a failed housing and support system, and failing criminal justice laws that allow someone with a history of violence who poses a clear threat to public safety to just walk out of court," Adams said following Abrokwa's second arrest. "We can’t allow this horrific situation to be the status quo and must make changes to our laws to both prevent these sort of attacks, through intervention and support, and, when they happen, to subsequently keep people who are clearly a danger to others off the street.”

According to Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office, bail was set to $5,000 cash, or $15,000 insurance company bond. A judge has also ordered a psychiatric evaluation.