NYPD Commissioner James O’Neill said on Tuesday that detectives are planning to reach out to the two women who told the New Yorker they were choked and slapped by Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.

Four women’s allegations were included in the story, which prompted Schneiderman to resign from his position within hours.

“We’re going to get our investigative game plan going forward and make sure we contact the people identified in the article and make sure there’s a full investigation of… these serious allegations,” O’Neill said at an unrelated crime briefing at police headquarters downtown.

Mayor Bill de Blasio said he believes Schneiderman should face criminal charges based on the allegations detailed in the article.

“Based on what I read, yes,” he said in response to a question.

Hizzoner was one of the few elected officials who didn’t speak out publicly about the allegations on Monday.

At 2 p.m. on Tuesday, he tore into Schneiderman — a fellow Democrat — over his alleged behavior.

“What we saw yesterday evening was absolutely disgusting — the attorney general of our state accused of doing things that no one should ever do, let alone someone involved in law enforcement,” he said before the crime briefing. “I was horrified. Page after page it got worse and worse and worse and it was horrifying. It was disgusting. It was horrifying in every way.”

Schneiderman’s ex-girlfriends Manning Barish and Tanya Selbaratnam spoke on the record to detail recurring physical and verbal abuse by the state’s top law enforcement official, often while he was drinking heavily.

He initially claimed any violence was consensual, sexual role-playing, but announced his resignation just a few hours later.