Metro

State ethics panel now investigating Bx. pol Naomi Rivera

Soon, the only agency that won’t be investigating Naomi Rivera will be Interpol.

The powerful State Joint Commission on Public Ethics yesterday joined the growing list of probers looking into claims that the Bronx assemblywoman put two lovers on the public payroll and used her nonprofit as a personal piggy bank, The Post has learned.

An investigator for JCOPE this week asked for a meeting with one of those ex-boyfriends, Vincent Pinela, sources said.

JCOPE — set up by Gov. Cuomo in 2011 to “restore public trust” by making sure officials follow state ethics rules — has broad jurisdiction over New York legislators, elected officials, candidates and employees.

The agency’s top prober reached out to Pinela, 40, after his explosive claims, revealed in The Post, that Rivera, 49, hired the personal trainer to run her crony-packed Bronx Council for Economic Development and used the nonprofit’s funds for romantic dinners and campaign expenses.

The probe is in the preliminary stage, and the 14-member commission must vote to start a full-blown probe.

Citing JCOPE policy, spokesman John Milgrim could not confirm or comment on any investigation.

Pinela declined comment.

The commission investigates potential ethics violations and, in the case of legislative officers and candidates, is required to refer its findings to the state’s Legislative Ethics Commission for enforcement, according to its Web site.

Also yesterday, the city Department of Investigation, which already launched one probe into Rivera, started another broader investigation, sources said.

Rivera’s BCED, which received city funding, took in at least $1.2 million in total government funds between 2005 and 2009, records show.

The scandal-scarred Rivera was already being eyed by the DOI’s special schools investigation unit, headed by Richard Condon, over a job she gave her latest boy toy, Brooklyn gym teacher and City Council candidate Tommy Torres, 35.

Torres raked in $18,000 working at Rivera’s Morris Park district office, during the same time he was being paid $90,000 from his full time teaching and coaching gig with the city.

She also is being probed by the US Attorney’s Office, the state attorney general and the Bronx DA.

Rivera’s powerful assemblyman dad, Jose Rivera, yesterday made his first public comments about his daughter since the scandal broke.

“She asked me, “Pop, let this finish.’ I’m giving her the benefit of the doubt, and I’ll wait until all the facts surface,” he said.

“It’s an investigation, we gotta let it take it’s course. And I think she’ll be fine.”

Jose Rivera, who was ousted as head of the Bronx Democrats in 2008 amid charges of nepotism, believe his daughter will win her upcoming re-election bid.

“I believe she’ll be re-elected. [Voters] want to se her back in Albany, because in Albany she has done what is needed.”

Additional reporting by Ikimulisa Livingston