Metro

Daughter of Sharpton with ‘sprained’ ankle posts more hiking Instagrams

She may have to settle for $5,000.

The Rev. Al Sharpton’s island-hopping, mountain-hiking daughter — who is suing the city for $5 million after purportedly injuring her ankle on a Soho sidewalk — posted more damning Instagram pics Monday of her frolicking in Indonesia as legal experts said her social-media activity could cost her big bucks.

“#Balidays on the Gilis!!!’’ Dominique Sharpton, 28, wrote with two snapshots of herself at what looked like a posh Gili Island retreat.

The new entries came the same day The Post revealed others in which the supposedly hobbled Dominique boasted of climbing a mountain there.

Since allegedly spraining her ankle in October, she has also been pictured in high heels at a hippie party and climbing the dicey terrain of Red Rock Canyon in Nevada.

The photos kill even the slightest chance Dominique had of collecting big bucks from the city, legal experts said, even as the de Blasio administration has been shelling out more money than ever to settle lawsuits.

“Her gallivanting around in high heels and climbing a mountain in Bali drastically diminish the value of her case because it clearly shows that her injuries are not severe, and as a result, she will not be paid or awarded any substantial amount of money by any rational jury,” said top Manhattan personal-injury lawyer Howard Hershenhorn.

Dominique broke a cardinal rule for personal-injury plaintiffs, said lawyer David Jaroslawicz.

“Live your life off social media if you have a case,’’ he said.

“If she’s going to claim she’s disabled, the first thing you tell your client is, ‘Don’t live on social media, because even if you don’t lie, it makes you look bad.’”

He said that even without the posts, Dominique would stand to win only $5,000 to $7,500 from the city at best.

That would leave her with a net gain of about zero after paying off expert witnesses and her lawyer, he said.

“Most people don’t bother bringing a sprain case because it just doesn’t pay,” Jaroslawicz said.

Dominique’s lawyer, John Elefterakis, said Monday that she is forging ahead with her case.

“That a person may or may not choose to engage in a physical activity in spite of pain and limitation does not excuse the occurrence of an injury, that simply put, should not have happened,’’ he said.

The Rev. Al, meanwhile, said his daughter’s lawyer had come up with the $5 million figure.

“She didn’t even have any decision on the amount. He filed for that,’’ he said.

Additional reporting by Josh Saul