Metro

Cop-killer Ronell Wilson ‘civilly dead,’ has no right to see son

It may be years before cop killer ­Ronell Wilson gets his lethal injection, but he’s already dead in the eyes of the court.

A seething Suffolk County Family Court judge ruled that the notorious Bloods gangster was “civilly dead” on Friday and denied him access to the child he conceived behind bars with former prison guard Nancy Gonzalez.

“The fact remains that he is currently imprisoned for a felony, and, in all likelihood, even if he is not executed, he will remain imprisoned for the remainder of his natural life,” wrote Judge ­David Freundlich. “Accordingly, [Wilson] remains civilly dead and devoid of his right to proceed with a paternity petition in court.”

Freundlich argued that Wilson’s son, Justus, would suffer if exposed to his infamous father and the “vicious and abhorrent nature” of his crimes.

The Staten Island thug was sentenced to death by a jury last month for the slaughter of undercover NYPD Detectives Rodney Andrews and James Nemorin during a 2003 gun buy-and-bust gone bad.

Displaying killer charm, Wilson managed to seduce Gonzalez into lurid trysts between March and April of 2012, and she became pregnant. The cop killer told his emotionally vulnerable mark that he wanted to conceive a child so that he could have something to live for as he faced a death sentence.

But the effect of Wilson’s sweet talk faded over time, and Gonzalez eventually wanted nothing to do with the ­father of her child. The petite mother even refused to testify on his behalf at trial despite repeated requests by ­Wilson’s defense team.

Her disdain became so intense that she eventually fought any attempt by Wilson to see their child behind bars.

Gonzalez admitted that she got “sucked into his world” and fell for his sob story and dreams of fatherhood, according to Brooklyn federal-court papers.

Wilson filed his paternity petition in August and argued that he should have some access to the boy as his confirmed father.

But Freundlich countered that the murderer was not entitled to enforcement of his petition because of his legal status.

Since the tot was conceived while Wilson was incarcerated, he had no legal standing to seek visitation, the judge ruled. “Court process is a civil right, and the right to sue is certainly one of the rights suspended upon imprisonment,” he wrote.

Gonzalez, who lives with the child and extended family in Huntington Station, has pleaded guilty to the illegal prison sex and is slated for sentencing next week.

The pair had relations while Wilson was housed at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center. Surveillance video shown at his sentencing trial depicts the pair disappearing off screen together in order to have sex.