An Atlanta police officer has been axed for allegedly mishandling $500 in cash from a homicide victim’s wallet, authorities said.

Officer Keisha Richburg’s bodycam footage released by the Atlanta Police Department shows the alleged incident unfolding June 19 at the scene of a shooting on Marietta Road near the Inman Rail Yard.

The footage shows EMT Kevin Geter tucking the money inside the wallet of the 29-year-old victim, Jamel Harris, then handing it off to Richburg.

When she handles the wallet in her squad car, the cash cannot be seen in the slot where Geter allegedly had placed the money, the video shows.

When “Officer Richburg transfers the victim’s wallet from her right hand to her left hand; it is readily apparent the money is no longer tucked inside the wallet,” a police report on the incident reads.

Geter confirmed to internal affairs investigators that he gave Richburg the wallet with cash inside, according to 11Alive.

“I’m about 90% sure it was money…cause it was – it was kinda like a – you know, like money would be folded in half. Um, and I can’t imagine it being anything else,” he said.

Later, the video shows Richburg handing off the empty wallet to a homicide unit sergeant at Grady Memorial Hospital.

Harris, who suffered a gunshot wound to the head, later died of his injuries at the hospital. An-Nur Green, 43, was arrested for shooting Harris over an argument, police said.

“Officer integrity goes to the heart of what we do here every single day,” Atlanta Police Chief Erika Shields said in a statement. “It’s extremely disappointing to see the victim of a fatal shooting be victimized twice by the actions of one of our officers.”

An Atlanta Police Department spokesperson told The Post that Richburg did not properly account for the money according to the department’s policies and procedures. An administrative investigation was not able to determine what happened to the cash.

Shields fired Richburg on Monday.

A regional director for the International Brotherhood of Police Officers told NBC News that the department hasn’t “proven that she had the money or took the money.”

Richburg is disputing the department’s claim and attempting to appeal her termination.