Metro

City settles with pair who refused to surrender burgers to cops

That’ ​ll buy​ a lot of sliders.

​Two Brooklyn men who claimed cops beat and booked them for refusing to hand over their ​sacks of ​White Castle​s​ in 2012 have scored a $32,500 settlement from the city, according to court papers.

Kenneth Glover and Danny Maisonett claimed that they were preparing to devour bags full of ​the tiny steamed burgers with “the taste some people can’t live without,” near a Key Food ​super​market in Coney Island in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy.

But before they could chow down, the pair claimed that several NYPD officers descended on the area because of looting reports, the suit states.

“Several New York City Police Officers approached them,” the suit states. “One of officers asked for the plaintiff’s food. Plaintiffs refused the officers request.”

Enraged by the denial, the officers began to beat the men with flashlights and eventually arrested them for obstruction of governmental administration, according to the suit.

Officers​, meanwhile,​ accused them of blocking their way as they tried to round up the looters, court papers state.

The pair were held for two days and were forced to attend several court appearances before the charges against them were tossed.

Represented by attorney Robert Marinelli, Glover and Maisonett filed suit against the city and the individual officers in March 2013.

The burger beef was dismissed Wednesday ​when the city agreed to pay Glover $20,000 and Maisonett $12,500 to quash the case.