Prosecutors have released the fake photos a Los Angeles dad used to scam his son’s way into the University of Southern California as an international water polo star.

Devin Sloane, 53, was sentenced to four months behind bars on Tuesday for paying $250,000 in bribes to get his son recruited by the school as a bogus athlete as part of the nationwide college admissions scandal.

Sloane “enlisted his minor son in the scheme, taking pictures of him throwing a ball in the family swimming pool, clad in the newly acquired water-polo gear, pretending to be something he is not,” prosecutors argued in court papers accompanying the images.

The shots were sent to a graphic designer, who cropped them to make them look as if they were taken in competition.

But they had to be sent back to the designer and altered again when William “Rick” Singer, the scheme’s mastermind, noted in an email that they showed the kid “a little high out of the water — no one gets that high.”

The graphic designer sent back a new picture, which Sloane sent to Singer for his review.

“Perfect,” Singer wrote back.