Metro

Alec Baldwin’s stalker found guilty

A Manhattan judge took just five minutes to find the woman accused of stalking Alec Baldwin guilty on all counts Thursday — and then immediately sentenced the weeping actress to more than half a year in jail.

Genevieve Sabourin, 41, cried into a tissue as Judge Robert Mandelbaum pronounced her guilty of aggravated harassment, stalking, criminal contempt and other counts, scolding her for her unwillingness to let go.

“Irrespective of the circumstances . . . you had no right to continue communication or pursue contact you knew to be unwanted or unwelcome,” Mandelbaum told Sabourin.

“Your relentless and escalating campaign of threats and in-person appearances in private spaces served, at a minimum, to harass, annoy and alarm Mr. Baldwin . . . and terrorized his wife,” he said.

The judge also ripped into Sabourin for her bizarre behavior before and during the trial, which he said demonstrated “an utter lack of respect of the law and the legal system.”

He sentenced her to six months jail in addition to the 30 days he’d hit her with on Wednesday for contempt of court after she refused to stop interrupting.

Sabourin, weeping uncontrollably, proclaimed her innocence.

“I haven’t done anything wrong. I’m innocent! You’re doing a mistake right now,” Sabourin protested in her light French accent.

The kooky Quebecer also voiced concerns over her pet Yorkie, Charlie, who accompanied her to New York from her suburban Montreal home.

“I need to know what’s happening with my dog,” she pleaded.

Defense lawyer Todd Spodek had pleaded for leniency, saying the power of Baldwin’s celebrity overwhelmed the lovestruck woman.

“The power was laser-focused on Miss Sabourin when Mr. Baldwin was courting her. That’s the power that he used when he initiated contact with her . . . each time he called her, e-mailed her, shared personal stories with her. He made her feel she was the object of his desire,” he said.

Spodek also ridiculed Baldwin’s testimony that he continued communicating with her only to get rid of her, and blasted the notoriously hotheaded actor for his past bad behavior.

“Mr. Baldwin is a man with a history of having no regard for other people,” the lawyer said.

“He threatens people as he pleases; he assaults people as he pleases.”

Prosecutor Zachary Stendig said Sabourin knew she was breaking the law but persisted in stalking Baldwin anyway.

“Your honor, at the beginning of this trial I told you you’d hear about the defendant’s crusade . . . to harass, annoy and alarm Alec Baldwin . . . That continued for nearly a year [and] couldn’t even be stopped by this court’s order of protection,” he said.

The prosecutor said that even if Sabourin and Baldwin did have sex, it didn’t excuse her behavior.

“Even if you were to take at face value that the defendant and Alec Baldwin slept together, it wouldn’t matter . . . She’s obsessed with Alec Baldwin,” he said.

Mandelbaum also hit her with a five-year order of protection to stay away from Baldwin and his wife, Hilaria.

Baldwin testified Tuesday that he met with Sabourin only to offer her career advice as a favor to movie producer Martin Bregman.

He claimed Bregman and Sabourin had an affair, a charge both have vehemently denied, with each branding him a liar.

Told of the verdict and sentence Thursday, a stunned Bregman replied, “Baldwin!”

“You’re kidding? Jesus, that’s a shame. She didn’t do anything. She was disrespectful in court. Two hundred and ten days? Oh, my God,” Bregman said to The Post.

Surveillance video introduced by prosecutors Wednesday showed Sabourin in the lobby of Baldwin’s East Village building, pacing in during a visit in which she appeared angry, the building’s doorman testified.