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Debt collectors hunt the real Wolf of Wall Street

The real-life Wolf of Wall Street can run from his creditors — but they’re still vowing to track him down.

A relentless debt collection agency has filed legal papers in California to force legendary Wall Street scammer Jordan Belfort to cough up $27,597 in unpaid bills for retail purchases he made before he was busted by the feds, TMZ.com reported.

LR Credit had gotten a judgment in New York against the inspiration for Leonardo DiCaprio’s character in the Martin Scorsese flick “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

Leonardo DiCaprio gets applause on screen (and off) as Jordan Belfort in “The Wolf of Wall Street.”AP Photo/Paramount Pictures

But Belfort, 51, rented a $4 million luxe pad fronting the Pacific Ocean in Manhattan Beach, so was able to avoid the New York order to pay up.

LR may still have a long wait before it sees any cash, as Belfort owes about $100 million to others he bilked when his penny-stock boiler-room operation — Stratton Oakmont — was in business.

Belfort was indicted in 1998 for securities fraud and money laundering. After cooperating with the feds, he served 22 months in a federal pen for a pump-and-dump scheme, which resulted in investor losses of about $200 million.

Belfort, now a motivational speaker, was ordered to pay back $110 million that he swindled from stock buyers.