Metro

Stop-and-frisk poster boy made thousands in fake ticket scam

The stop-and-frisk poster boy at the forefront of a pending federal lawsuit copped a no-jail plea deal Thursday on charges he sold fake Broadway and concert tickets to unsuspecting tourists.

Angel Ortiz, 20, pleaded guilty to two counts of criminal possession of a forged instrument, as well as grand larceny charges, and must pay roughly $8,000 in restitution in exchange for five years probation.

The smooth talker conned at least six victims out of thousands by selling fake tickets on Craigslist for hit Broadway shows like “Book of Mormon” and “Kinky Boots” and sporting events like Giants games.

Ortiz met ticket buyers at Starbucks and hotel lobbies, where he handed over hard-paper tickets and a paper receipt before walking off with the cash.

Ortiz made headlines in 2012 as the high-profile plaintiff in anti-stop-and-frisk litigation, posing for photos and giving media interviews outside Manhattan Federal court.

He claimed cops illegally stopped and frisked him before roughing him up for no reason near his Tremont, Bronx home seven years ago.