The feds warned President Trump’s close aide Hope Hicks that Russian operatives had repeatedly tried to contact her during the presidential transition, a new report said Friday.

The Russian’s attempt to contact Hicks, now the White House communications director, demonstrate that even after the US intelligence community warned that the Kremlin was meddling in the election, the operatives were still trying to establish contacts with the administration, The New York Times reported.

The is no indication or evidence that Hicks — who was interviewed by special counsel Robert Mueller’s team this week — did anything wrong, the paper said.

After Trump was sworn in, senior FBI counterintelligence agents met with Hicks at the White House at least twice and identified the Russians who had reached out to her, explaining that they were not who they said they were.

The meetings were what the feds call a “defensive briefing” and went beyond the usual security warnings and advice advice that they give senior White House officials, the Times said.