A Garden spokesman would not elaborate on whether Saturday’s latest heckler of owner James Dolan would be banned from the Garden — a la Charles Oakley and Mike Hamersky.

You remember Hamersky? In April 2017, the lawyer from Queens screamed at Dolan outside the Garden to sell the Knicks.

Dolan cursed him out, security got involved. Dolan allegedly went through with a threat in refusing Hamersky’s attempts at renewing a partial season-ticket plan. Hamersky made phone calls to his season-ticket reps to re-up for the 2017-18 and 2018-19 seasons and got ghosted.

“My situation remains unchanged, though I remain hopeful that a benevolent billionaire swoops in and buys the team to rescue us from our misery,” Hamersky told The Post on Sunday.

Dolan does not get enough credit for spending whatever it takes to build a Knicks winner, but Saturday’s taped incident is not the kind of attention the franchise needs with summer free agency four months away.

State Senator Brad Hoylman went so far as to call Dolan out on Twitter: “Madison Square Garden gets over $40M/year in property tax breaks,” he said in a tweet. “If James Dolan wants to treat it as his private stadium & ban fans for merely suggesting he sell a team, then perhaps Albany should take his lead — and redirect those public dollars to Penn Station’s MTA facilities.”

A Garden official recently told an NBA source a concern exists Dolan’s reputation doesn’t help the Knicks’ free-agent mission.

According to multiple sources, Dolan’s reputation may have cost them Steve Kerr as head coach. Kerr’s kinder feelings toward Warriors ownership contributed to his reneging on a verbal offer from Phil Jackson. During the Knicks’ courting process, Kerr called a handful of Knicks reporters to seek their opinions of Dolan’s influence.

Kristaps Porzingis has not stated publicly the reasons he felt uncomfortable remaining with the organization long term. It’s a good bet his brother Janis Porzingis wasn’t gung-ho with the Dolan/Steve Mills leadership, considering their past history of losing together.

Dolan fired Jackson for wanting to trade Porzingis before the 2017 draft. Jackson became leery about Porzingis’ durability and happiness being here for the long haul. Dolan touts how uninvolved he’s been in recent years in basketball decisions, but seemed involved regarding Porzingis back in 2017.

Almost two years later, the Knicks essentially traded Porzingis for the riskiness of cap space when Jackson had much stronger offers on the table.

“I’m satisfied,” Dolan said at a Chelsea Piers charity bowling event the night of the Porzingis trade.

That Dolan still is going after some of these loyal fans is ironic. These customers deserve medals for showing up.

Dolan does have many cordial interactions with fans and genuinely appreciates the Garden’s full houses amid trying seasons. The NBA’s worst team faces Minnesota on Sunday 40 games under .500 at 13-53, but is drawing an average crowd of 18,908 — which ranks 10th in the NBA.

The rock-solid attendance figures come despite having the NBA’s worst record across the last 18 years. Since the 2001-2002 season, the Knicks have the NBA’s worst aggregate won-loss mark at 570-874.

Mayors, governors and presidents regularly get booed at sporting events. Hence, when a patron yells at Dolan to sell the team, as one did when the owner was leaving the arena Saturday after the Sacramento collapse, Dolan is better to tell the patron: “Don’t worry, it will get better. Thanks for coming.”

Instead?

Dolan: “Do you really think I should sell the team? That’s rude.”

Fan: “It’s an opinion.”

Dolan: “No, it’s not an opinion. And you know what, enjoy watching them on TV.”

Dolan can be seen on the video, published by TMZ, signaling for security to deal with the fan. TMZ reported two cops and security arrived to ID and question the heckler before ordering him to leave the premises.

“Our policy is and will continue to be that if you are disrespectful to anyone in our venues, we will ask you not to return,” a Garden spokesperson said.

This isn’t the publicity the Knicks need entering a free agency that will make or break them. Incidentally, the Garden announced recently it had hired a new public relations executive for its sports teams, to start later this week.

While Dolan doesn’t appear ready to solicit offers on the club despite the whispers and his remark, “As the head of the public company, you can’t say you can’t sell,” perhaps he would change his tune if he strikes out in free agency this summer.

In fact, Fox Sports 1’s Chris Broussard reported days ago Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving, who are tight, have some “apprehensions” about the Knicks.

With the team’s last two lottery picks disappointments to date in Frank Ntilikina and Kevin Knox, the roster is bad enough. The last thing the Knicks need is for a Dolan incident to make them look worse.