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Alec Baldwin arrested for disorderly conduct after flare-up with New York cops: police

Alec Baldwin rides his bicycle back home after being busted for riding the wrong way down a one way road Manhattan on Tuesday.
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Alec Baldwin rides his bicycle back home after being busted for riding the wrong way down a one way road Manhattan on Tuesday.
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So get out of town, clown.

Alec Baldwin got his rubber nose out of joint — and went on a New York City-dissing Twitter tear — after he was busted Tuesday for flipping out on two cops who were just doing their jobs.

“New York City is a mismanaged carnival of stupidity that is desperate for revenue and anxious to criminalize behavior once thought benign,” Baldwin wrote.

Then, in a subsequent tweet, Baldwin gave up the name and badge number of the female officer who ended his foul-mouthed tirade by cuffing him.

And finally, incredibly, Baldwin boo-hooed that “the police did nothing” about the photographers who were drawn by his bad behavior to his East Village building.

“Meanwhile, photographers outside my home ONCE AGAIN terrified my daughter and nearly hit her with a camera,” he tweeted.

Baldwin has threatened to leave New York before after run-ins with police and paparazzi, but the Emmy-winning bozo has never followed through.

Alec Baldwin rides his bicycle back home after being busted for riding the wrong way down a one way road Manhattan on Tuesday.
Alec Baldwin rides his bicycle back home after being busted for riding the wrong way down a one way road Manhattan on Tuesday.

And with this latest stunt, Baldwin just burnished his reputation as a bipolar Greta Garbo who simultaneously courts trouble and wants to be left alone.

Baldwin’s latest blow-up came after he was stopped at 10:15 a.m. for riding his bicycle against traffic on Fifth Ave. near 16th St. in the Flatiron District.

When the cops asked him for identification, Baldwin lost it on them, sources told The Daily News.

“He became belligerent, yelling and screaming at the officers, ‘I don’t have ID. Just give me the f—–g summonses,'” one police source said.

Rene Cardona, 44, of the Bronx, backed up the cops’ account.

“They confiscated the bike from him,” he said. “He got loud.”

“He was riding his bike in the wrong direction when some cops stopped him,” added another witness, 27-year-old Michael Jones of Bellmore, LI. “They were walking him up the avenue. He looked like a tool.”

With Baldwin dropping F-bombs, the cops marched him to a police car, a moment captured by a lensman from InTouch Magazine.

Baldwin was still seething when he arrived at Manhattan’s 13th Precinct and was charged with disorderly conduct.

“How old are these officers?” Baldwin groused. “They don’t even know who I am.”

Deputy Inspector David Ehrenberg, the commanding officer, recognized Baldwin, although it wasn’t from his “30 Rock” TV show or his movies.

It was from Baldwin’s “previous run-ins with the law,” an NYPD spokesman said.

Slapped with a disorderly conduct charge and given a court date, Baldwin was unrepentant and still furious when he arrived home.

Baldwin stormed past reporters on the heels of his wife, Hilaria, who was holding their daughter Carmen. He ventured out again a short time later, pushing past the photographers with the help of some hired muscle to a waiting Lincoln Town Car.

When Baldwin returned, he sneered but said nothing to the few remaining reporters. He was clutching a brown messenger back and a copy of Bob Dylan documentary “Don’t Look Back.”

Baldwin was scheduled to appear in court July 24.

With Erik Badia, Thomas Tracy and Joe Kemp

csiemaszko@nydailynews.com

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