The Justice Department’s inspector general is “reviewing” at least two of the memos that ex-FBI director James Comey gave to a pal to leak to the press, a new report said Friday.

One of the memos contained information that wasn’t classified when Comey turned it over to a Columbia law school professor, but was later upgraded to “confidential,” the lowest level of classification, The Wall Street Journal reported.

In the other, Comey redacted parts that he knew were classified to protect that information before he handed the documents over to the law prof, Daniel Richman, who passed them along to The New York Times.

The memos memorialized the top G-man’s conversations with President Trump, and Comey said he wrote them so he’d have a contemporaneous record of the conversations in case the president denied them later.

Trump and GOP lawmakers have repeatedly attacked Comey’s handling of the memos, with the president furiously railing on Twitter that Comey is a “LIAR” and “LEAKER” who should be jailed.

Democrats say the memos show that Comey’s Congressional testimony about Trump’s demands for personal loyalty and request for leniency for disgraced ex-national security adviser Mike Flynn was true.

Comey, meanwhile, on his book tour has infuriated the president with statements that Trump is morally unfit to hold office.

But, as the former FBI chief told the BBC Friday, “I don’t dislike Trump — I actually feel sorry for him as a person.”

“I think the way in which he acts, especially his corrosive ­effect on norms — truth-telling being the most important of them — has that staining effect on institutions and people who are close to them,” Comey said.