A Brooklyn electrician is demanding $28 million from the NYPD because a cop falsely arrested him — and called his pricy pink Michael Jordan sneakers “fake,” a new lawsuit claims.

Ricky Francis, 28, of East Flatbush says the cop not only trumped up charges against him — he dared to say his $125 shoes were knockoffs before tossing him in jail on April 7, the lawsuit states.

“One of the officers . . . began teasing Plaintiff that the sneakers Plaintiff was wearing were ‘fake Michael Jordans’ and plaintiff responded that they were real,” according to the lawsuit, filed in Eastern District of New York Court Wednesday.

Francis’ lawyer Michael J. Redenburg claimed that the cop, who is not named in the lawsuit, had it out for Francis because he drives a tricked-out Range Rover in the gritty neighborhood.

Francis was arrested at a bodega on Clarendon Road and Flatbush Avenue for obstructing governmental administration and disorderly conduct, according to the lawsuit. The charges were later dropped.

Ten officers are named in the lawsuit, along with the NYPD.

“We will review the complaint when it is served,” a city Law Department spokesman said Friday.