Police arrested a suspect for a break-in at Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s San Antonio campaign offices early Wednesday morning.

sanantonioplazaJust over a week after Trump stopped in to his campaign office and national call center in downtown San Antonio, the building was targeted by a burglar who was later nabbed by San Antonio Police, Fox San Antonio reports.

“At approximately 5:30 this morning one of our off duty officers was out here working security for one of the offices here. He heard someone attempting to break into one of the suites there,” a San Antonio Police spokesman told the news site.

“He went ahead and detained him and called on-duty officers who came and launched an investigation. It looks like the individual they detained had been burglarizing other offices in the area. The investigation is still underway right now,” the spokesman said.

Officers do not believe the break-in was politically motivated, and there’s no evidence to suggest the suspect specifically targeted Trump.

Trump stopped into the office on Oct. 11 after a private fundraiser in downtown San Antonio.

“He was here to let the people who are working for him and supporting him, volunteers, know that he cares about them,” Linda Marin, who works in the Plaza Building office, told Fox San Antonio. “And he’s here to give them some motivation to keep going until the election.”

After stopping at the campaign office, Trump headed to the airport where he shook hands with more than a dozen San Antonio Police officers wearing red Make America Great Again hats before departing, according to Fox San Antonio.

“Thank you Texas!” Trump tweeted along with a video shaking hands with the officer that included the message “We will make America safe and great again, together!”

The police officers’ appreciation for Trump did not sit well with San Antonio Police Chief Williams McManus or May Ivy Taylor, both of whom were quick to promise swift action against the officers from breaking policies against political activity.

“The officers wearing the campaign hats while in uniform violated SAPD policy and will be disciplined appropriately,” McManus wrote in a statement. “The officers displayed poor judgement. I expect them to know better than to give the appearance of endorsing a candidate while on duty and in uniform, regardless of the political campaign or the candidate.”

Democrat Mayor Ivy Taylor posted about the incident on Facebook.

“I am deeply disappointed by some of our SAPD officers’ lack of judgment,” she wrote. “While on duty, police must be above politics with an obligation to serve everyone equally. Everything they do should send that message and today’s actions did not.”

Trump responded to the fallout during a radio interview with San Antonio’s Joe Pags Show, KABB reports.

“I was so sad to hear about it,” Trump said, “you can imagine if they wore a crooked Hillary hat, they would have been just fine.”