Metro

Good ‘Scam’aritan

He couldn’t resist one last scam.

A career fraudster was sent to the slammer for nearly 24 years after giving a White Plains federal judge phony photos of himself doing charity work at hospitals and schools in a bumbling bid for leniency.

Daryl Simon’s bald-faced move included sticking a picture of himself into a shot with a physical-therapy patient, then flipping the image and placing it next to a teen student.

“Evidence that his image was inserted and flipped can be seen by examining the single detail on his shirt above his fingers — that detail appears on the left side of the shirt in the top photograph, and on the right side of the shirt in the bottom photograph,” prosecutors wrote.

Another particularly heartless snapshot shows the 38-year-old scammer purportedly comforting a sickly patient struggling during a rehabilitation exercise.

Simon even had the gall to submit fake letters of support from various charitable organizations and individuals, according to the US Attorney’s Office.

Judge Stephen Robinson saw through the ruse, blasting Simon Thursday for trying to “commit a fraud on the court.”

Robinson then slapped him with a 285-month prison term — 50 months more than the maximum under sentencing guidelines — for credit-card fraud and bail jumping.

His brazen crimes included buying a sports car with a fake cashier’s check for $29,500, along with numerous credit-card scams and possession of a stolen Mercedes-Benz.

His most recent case stems from a 2006 arrest, in which he and a cohort bought electronic gear at a Target store in West Nyack, using phony credit cards in the name of “D. Simon.”

He pleaded guilty to credit-card fraud the next year, but jumped bail.

While he was on the lam, he worked as a magician and went by the name Justin Lusion. Two years ago, he was found in Queens.

bruce.golding@nypost.com