Business

Kook arrested for stalking Jamie Dimon

JPMorgan Chase boss Jamie Dimon was followed around the Big Apple by a stalker, The Post has learned.

Greg Waltman, 30, who runs a clean energy firm, called Dimon at his Midtown office 30 times over the last several weeks, according to a Manhattan Criminal Court complaint.

In each of the calls, Waltman demanded to speak directly to Dimon — although he never got through to the 59-year-old chief executive of the country’s largest bank.

The kook also paid a visit to Dimon’s tony Park Avenue co-op on Aug. 20 and insisted on having a face-to-face meeting with the banker, it is alleged.

However, the doorman took one look at the 6-foot-2, 235-pound weirdo and told him to get lost — and to never come back, court papers say.

Waltman ignored the warning and returned to the posh building on Jan. 8, asking again for a sit-down with Dimon.

Once again, he was booted by security, sources said.

But the wacky Waltman came back a third time — on Jan. 13 — and stood across the street from Dimon’s high-rise, court papers state.

A security officer at the building confronted Waltman, who shouted, “I’m here to see Jamie Dimon! Mr. Dimon owes me money,” the documents say.

The guard quickly called the cops, and Waltman was soon in handcuffs — charged with stalking, criminal trespass and aggravated harassment.

Waltman, who operates a bizarre website touting his nuclear and analytical company, G1 Quantum Fund, was released Jan. 16 on $5,000 bail.

A judge ordered Waltman not to have any contact with Dimon.

Waltman’s bizarre behavior stretches back to December 2012, when he crashed a New York conference where Dimon was giving a Q&A.

Waltman, addressing Dimon, went on a rambling rant about Hillary Clinton and President Obama before asking the CEO if he was “shadow banking with the Burmese junta.”

A perplexed Dimon snapped, “There’s rumors about what? I have no idea what you’re talking about.”

Waltman also crashed a town hall meeting featuring presidential hopeful Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and accused the lawmaker of stepping out on his wife.

“You cheated on your wife in Florida,” Waltman said. Then, as he was about to be kicked out of the venue, Waltman gave Rubio some unsolicited advice: “I think you should drop out of the race. Your polling numbers are too low to win.”

Neither Waltman nor his lawyer returned calls for comment. Dimon declined comment.