A bus driver who struck and killed a newly married federal law clerk in lower Manhattan took a no-jail plea deal Tuesday and was sentenced to a conditional discharge for the tragic death.

Xi Chen, 50, hit Kimberly Greer at 7:30 p.m. in December as she stepped into the intersection of Centre and Leonard streets. Chen pleaded guilty to failure to yield and failure of a driver to exercise due care in Manhattan Criminal Court.

He consented to a six-month license revocation and a commercial driving course and must pay $1,000 in fines.

Prosecutor Harrison Schweiloch read a statement from the victim’s father, George Greer.

“Her accomplishments are too numerous to list but clearly she had a positive influence on all who were lucky enough to know her,” wrote the grieving father. Greer was working as a clerk for federal Judge Katherine Parker and as an adjunct law professor at Fordham Law School at the time of her death.

“My entire family and friends will never be the same since this tragic loss, we can only hold tightly to the memories and thoughts of what might have been,” the elder Greer wrote in the statement.

On Dec. 20, 2018, Greer had just gotten off work. She had stayed late to hammer out a legal decision with Judge Parker.

As she attempted to cross Leonard Street from south to north inside the crosswalk, the private charter bus, driven by Chen, made a left turn onto Leonard Street. The front of the bus struck her and knocked her down while the pedestrian crosswalk signal was still in her favor.

She was rushed to New York-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan, where she was pronounced dead.

The accomplished attorney married fellow lawyer, Michael Singer, just five weeks before the tragic collision. They both graduated from Fordham Law School.