Metro

Guardian Angels’ Sliwa returns to radio, still balks at child support

Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa’s radio career has rebounded — but he’s still balking at increasing child support to his ex-wife.

“Mr. Sliwa is now back to his old salary of $400,000,” former spouse Mary Sliwa’s attorney Paul Siegert told a Manhattan Family Court judge on Tuesday.

The Guardian Angels founder turned radio personality returned to his old gig with former employer WABC last month. The conservative Sliwa joins lefty attorney Ron Kuby from noon to 3 p.m. on weekdays.

WABC re-hired Sliwa as part of a plan to compete with rival WOR, which syndicates major radio talent like Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity.

The reunion — Sliwa co-hosted a morning show with Kuby from 200 to 2007 — means a huge income bump for the father of three whose salary was slashed to $200,000 in Dec. 2012 after his then-employer Salem Communications suffered serious damage during Hurricane Sandy.

Following the pay cut Sliwa reduced the $13,000-a-month child support to his ex-wife Mary Sliwa for their son Anthony to $2,500.

He hauled his ex to Family Court to approve the drop.

Sliwa’s attorney, Alton Abramowitz, cut off the demands for more money in court, telling the judge the negotiations should not be made in public.

Sliwa also pays his live-in girlfriend, Queens Borough President Melinda Katz, $5,000 a month for their two sons. Katz says she conceived the boys through in vitro fertilization using Sliwa’s frozen sperm.

But Mary Sliwa, who is also suing Katz and her former hubby in civil court claiming they conspired to steal over $500,000 in her marital assets to start a new family, calls the frozen sperm story “a fairy tale.”

“No sane person would believe that Katz used ancient sperm when she was frequently and repeatedly receiving my husband’s fresh sperm during sexual intercourse,” Mary Sliwa alleges in court papers.

The jilted wife says the duo carried on an affair during the entirety of her 12-year marriage– even allegedly shacking up the night before Mary and Curtis wed.

“What we’re after is our money back,” said Mary’s attorney Paul Siegert.

“We want to get the money back that these two lovebirds took..”

Mary told Family Court Magistrate Margaret Morgan in December that she’s broke and recently pawned her diamond ring and gold jewelry for $13,000 to pay the bills.

The Sliwas are due back in court on Friday.