More than 30 Pride flags were found snapped and strewn outside the Stonewall National Monument in Manhattan Sunday, police say.

It marks the third time Pride flags have been destroyed at the historic site in just over one week.

The first incident occurred on June 10, and the second on June 15.

As of Monday morning, no arrests had been made in any of the cases and an investigation remains ongoing.

Police say the NYPD’s Hate Crimes Task Force has been notified.

The Stonewall Inn, which sits across the street from the monument on Christopher Street, was the site of a 1969 uprising sparked by a police raid that served as a watershed moment in the history of the LGBTQ+ rights movement.

Then-President Barack Obama designated the bar, the park across from it and the streets and sidewalks around it a national monument in 2016 — a year after the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission deemed the bar an individual landmark.