Andrea Peyser

Andrea Peyser

US News

Proof that celebrities get special treatment in court

Beware, New Yorkers. There are two standards of justice at play in this city: one for freakishly entitled celebs who run roughshod over innocent folk, and another for the rest of us ordinary dolts.

It has come to my attention that Manhattan Criminal Court Judge Robert Mandelbaum — the same jurist who threw the book at Alec Baldwin’s nobody nemesis, Genevieve Sabourin, the lady whose greatest sin was loving the Bloviator a tad too obsessively — once gave every break imaginable to a famous, violent criminal:

Supermodel Naomi Campbell.

Naomi Campbell pleaded guilty to assaulting her maid in 2007, but was allowed to cop to a misdemeanor.David M. Benett/Getty Images

Mandelbaum on Thursday convicted the flaky but harmless Genevieve, 41, of stalking and harassing the celebrated rageaholic Alec, 55, and his wife, Hilaria, 29.

He sentenced the cracked Canadian actress wannabe to an astonishing seven months in jail — including 30 days for contempt after she shrieked, cried and whined in court as Alec claimed (lied, said Genevieve) that he never had sexual relations with that woman.

But Mandelbaum was far kinder and gentler when faced with a bona-fide toxic celeb, the surly catwalker named Naomi.

The manic mannequin faced the judge in 2007, pleading guilty to a charge of misdemeanor assault for clocking her maid, Ana Scolavino, then 38, in the head with a jewel-encrusted BlackBerry in Naomi’s Park Avenue duplex.

Originally, Naomi, who’s been accused of beating on the help no fewer than 10 times between 1998 and 2008, faced a felony charge for assaulting the uncelebrated servant, which could have brought her two to seven years in prison if convicted at trial.

But Naomi, then 36, was allowed to cop to a misdemeanor. And she summoned the chutzpah to tell Mandelbaum that hurling her phone at Ana was an “accident.”

The judge sentenced her to a mere five days’ community service, ordered her to pay the maid’s $363 in medical expenses and forced the ill-tempered model to take anger-management classes.

By way of thanks, Naomi made a mockery of a judiciary that bent over backward to cut her bony self some slack, showing up to sweep a South Street sanitation depot draped in fur, a fedora and, on her final day, a sequined Dolce & Gabbana evening gown and stilettos.

Meanwhile, Genevieve, who’s never been accused of hitting, bashing or making anyone bleed, rots on Rikers Island without her makeup, wearing ugly, black flat shoes while denied the company of her pet Yorkie, Charlie.

Is my city turning into Los Angeles — a place where Chris Brown was sentenced to probation and community service for bashing the face of Rihanna, and 50 Cent was awarded probation for smashing up his ex-girlfriend’s condo?

It isn’t fair.

Alec Baldwin is free to wander the streets of New York, a cursing, gay-bashing human wrecking ball. And the one woman who summoned the guts to stand up to him is locked up for months.

Mandelbaum isn’t shy about his fondness for the famous. Last year, he learned one of his favorite singers, Suzanne Vega, is married to a lawyer who represented 20 demonstrators the judge convicted of disorderly conduct after they blocked a Harlem precinct house in a protest against the NYPD’s practice of stop, question and frisk.

Momentarily forgetting his robes, Judge Mandelbaum asked, inappropriately, to meet privately with the “Tom’s Diner’’ folk singer. It didn’t go so well.

Vega gave the judge an earful, telling him she was “disappointed” with his guilty verdict. He replied that it was Vega’s “prerogative.”

But this episode reveals an unpleasant truth. Become a celeb, and you may be granted special access to our impartial judges.

I reached out to Judge Mandelbaum at his chambers, but the call was not returned.

Meanwhile, Alec has reverted to his usual self, lobbing anti-gay slurs at a Post photographer: “C- -ksucking f-g!”

Alec admits he spewed the first word, but maintains he called the shutterbug a “fat head.” (An audiotape reveals something different.) He said “sorry” to GLAAD, which earlier forgave the liberal blowhard for calling a reporter a “queen” who might “dig” having Alec’s foot planted in dark and sensitive regions of his body. He said he was “retiring” the gay slur from his vocabulary.

On Friday, MSNBC canceled two episodes of Alec’s show, “Up Late,” as a penalty for blatant homophobia. Until then, Alec has never, to my knowledge, been punished for egregious behavior — roughing up shutterbugs, disobeying flight attendants and raging into his then-11-year-old daughter’s voicemail, “You are a rude, thoughtless little pig.”

Now Alec is threatening to quit showbiz to protect his family from the media, a frightening prospect. An idle Alec is a scary Alec.

I’ve all but given up on the idea of equal justice in this city. Genevieve Sabourin got a raw deal.

But then, she wasn’t a supermodel or a star.

Crime is a fare bet

After threatening to increase bus and subway fares by 7.5 percent in both 2015 and 2017, the MTA announced that it’s slashing the hikes to 4 percent and rolling back higher tolls for bridges and tunnels — by cutting costs. That was easy!

But reducing waste isn’t likely to make the NYPD enforce laws against petty crimes committed by the homeless, like aggressive subway panhandling. Scary begging has increased dramatically in the last two years, under the glare of ferocious anti-cop sentiment.

In the future, you might be able to afford a ride. Just don’t expect to feel safe taking the underground plunge.

Reason to be high on NYC

It’s official. At 1,776 feet, One World Trade Center was declared the nation’s tallest building by a panel of architects who ruled that its spire is a permanent fixture. The decision angered Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, whose city’s Willis Tower is No. 2.

Stand tall, New York!

Titillating dilemma

City cops are hunting for a teen who stole a credit card and driver’s license in order to get her breasts enlarged. The young lady, a possible escort believed to be 19, underwent a $7,500 enhancement a year and a half ago, but the boob job was only just detected and reported.

How do cops expect to get back the stolen property?

Can-’do kid Dante

Dante de Blasio’s gigantic Afro earned him a spot on Time magazine’s list of the year’s most influential teens, joining the likes of singer Lorde, 17, and Malala Yousafzai, 16, the Pakistani girl shot in the head by the Taliban because she advocated for girls’ education.

That’s one impressive ’do.