Metro

Dotcom millionaire hit with felony drug sale charges

She’s going from dotcom to drug con.

A Manhattan grand jury has slammed former dotcom millionaire Jennifer Sultan with high-level felony drug sale charges, accusing her of being a pain-killer queen-pin, The Post has learned.

Sultan sold thousands of dollars in pills to an undercover detective in drug deals done in the Union Square over the past half year, a law enforcement source said, speaking on condition of anonymity about a new indictment won this week by the office of citywide Special Narcotics Prosecutor Bridget Brennan.

The undercover first found Sultan through an advertisement she’d posted — online — hawking drugs, the source said.

But this online venture won’t earn the 38-year-old petite brunette anything more than a possible prison stint. Sultan is expected to be arraigned this afternoon on the new charges, which carry a maximum sentence of 10 years.

And she hasn’t even been hit with the worst yet from the Manhattan DA’s office, which is continuing to separately develop an A-1-level pain pill peddling case against her that could keep her behind bars for an additional 25 years.

Sultan, 38, was on top of the world twelve years ago, selling her Web streaming-media company, Live On Line, for $70 million of dollars. She is now in bankruptcy court — and in jail.

Two weeks ago, cops dragged her out of her $6 million Flatiron District penthouse on low-level conspiracy charges — for allegedly joining with a Queens drug thug in supplying pain killers to accused NYPD gun thief Police Officer Nicholas Mina, 31.

At the same time as Special Narcotics investigators were tracking her alleged drug sales in Union Square, investigators with Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance’s office were tapping her phone in connection with the Mina case.

Over the past few months, they allegedly caught Sultan arranging to supply bulk prescription pain pills to accused kingpin Ivan Chavez — including a whopping 60,000 pills recovered from Chavez’s house in Queens when the Mina conspiracy case broke two weeks ago.

“She acts as some sort of supplier for Mr. Chavez in various large scale drug deals she arranged for him for their mutual benefit so that she could supply her own drug business with pills and drugs,” assistant district attorney Chris Prevost had said in demanding high bail for Sultan at her arraignment July 13.