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FORECLOSED GOTTI KIDS FORSAKE POP

“We don’t consider him our father.”

Victoria Gotti’s eldest son, Carmine Agnello Jr., blasted his namesake yesterday for leaving the mob princess and his brothers on the verge of homelessness.

“My dad did this to us,” said Agnello Jr., 23. “He decided once he got out of jail he was going to get another life, and he left us behind with the burden.”

“He did his kids wrong, and he did his wife wrong,” Carmine said outside the Old Westbury, LI, mansion where he temporarily lives with Victoria, the ex-wife of Carmine Sr., and a daughter of late mob boss John “Dapper Don” Gotti.

“To be honest with you, we don’t consider him our father,” Carmine said of himself and younger brothers, John and Frank.

Last week, an appeals court signed off on putting the Gotti mansion in foreclosure after mortgage holder JPMorgan Chase said the former reality star failed to make two years’ worth of payments on the property.

Gotti, whose well-gelled brood’s show “Growing Up Gotti” was based at the 6-acre estate, owes $650,000 on the mortgage note. She recently has been trying to sell the residence, which is currently listed at $3.2 million.

Gotti has said the elder Agnello, 48, secretly took out an $850,000 mortgage on the property in 1996.

Land records show Agnello signed the mortgage in both of their names — using the power of attorney she granted him.

Gotti, 46, said she only became aware of the mortgage after being granted full ownership of the house in 2005. She promptly defaulted and set off a legal tussle that resulted in last week’s foreclosure decision.

Carmine Jr., said his father — an auto shredder who was released from prison in early 2008 after serving a nine-year racketeering stint — hasn’t stepped up to take responsibility for the loan or much else.

“We’ve had to take this thing on our shoulders, without any help from him,” said Carmine, who told The Post he and his brothers soon will be featured in a new LA-based reality series. “We were forced to mature quick and take his place.”

The CW Post student said his dad, who last year married the daughter of a prominent Armenian terrorism leader and now lives in Cleveland, doesn’t call him or his brothers on their birthdays, graduations or other important dates.

Asked how Victoria Gotti was dealing with the prospect of losing her home, Carmine Jr. said, “My mother is a strong woman. But we’ll get through it, and she’ll get through it.”

selim.algar@nypost.com