Metro

Judge: Curtis Sliwa’s ex doesn’t have to turn over racy recordings

Guardian Angels founder Curtis Sliwa got hit with a double whammy by a Manhattan family court judge Thursday who ruled the radio personality may not slash child support for his disabled son– and also said his ex-wife did not have to turn over a trove of embarrassing, steamy communications between the law-and-order legend turned radio personality and his politician girlfriend.

Spurned ex Mary Sliwa is sitting on some 200 racy recordings — some more of which her attorney, Paul Siegert, said he planned to make public — between Curtis Sliwa and his gal pal and baby mama, Queens Borough President Melinda Katz.

Mary Sliwa published transcripts of 19 hot and heavy conversations last January in a separate, $1 million fraud action against the duo, alleging they conspired to steal $342,000 in marital assets while she was still married to him.

“Last night was about the fact that you are capable of making love to me twice,” Katz allegedly said in a July 2010 phone message on Curtis’ voicemail – more than six months before he left his wife.

“You should remember that when you married Mary, you were with me the night before you left for the wedding,” Katz allegedly cooed in another July 2012 recording.

The Sliwas have an 11-year-old son named Anthony who has learning and social disabilities.

“Curtis meant the world to this child and his decision to leave the family for another woman has devastated this little boy,” Mary Sliwa said in court papers.

Curtis and Mary Sliwa in 2000G.N. Miller

Curtis, who translated the fame he earned as the head of the red beret-wearing Guardian Angels into a lucrative career as a radio personality, revealed in 2012 that he had donated frozen sperm to his long-time friend, Melinda Katz.

She gave birth through in-vitro fertilization to two boys. The couple now live together in the borough president’s Forest Hills home.

He asked the court to approve a reduction in child support for Anthony from $13,000 to $2,500 a month because he was also paying Katz $5,000 a month for their two sons and had suffered a salary slash.

But since the case was filed last year the conservative Curtis got a new job at WABC Radio co-hosting an afternoon talk show with lefty attorney Ron Kuby. The two led a successful morning show in the early 2000s.

The judge will decide in a future ruling how much Curtis has to pay Mary.

Katz’s attorney declined to comment because the Family Court ruling did not directly involve her. Curtis’ attorney was traveling out of state and did not immediately return messages.