A Utah man belonging to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints says he told LDS leaders about his child porn obsession — including how he made and distributed images of kids as young as 4 — and they didn’t report him to police.

Benjamin Alyk, a former LDS mission rep who served in the Dominican Republic, claims he told multiple church officials about his sickening behavior and had been ordered to appear before a disciplinary council, but nothing was done to alert authorities.

Court documents obtained by KUTV and the Truth and Transparency Foundation, a non-profit media outlet that promotes transparency within religious institutions, outline the alleged cover-up — including how Alyk, 20, gave LDS leaders specific information about his crimes, which took place when he was 14 to 17.

The young man went to church officials on at least two separate occasions before eventually turning himself in and confessing to the Davis County Attorney’s Office in 2018, according to the court docs.

He told prosecutors that he had joined a website where people could share explicit images of children and been using a GoPro camera to film and upload some of his own. Alyk said he would often take videos of his cousins, ages 4 and 6, while they used the bathroom. The sicko would also secretly film members of his mother’s in-home daycare as they changed into swimsuits.

Alyk went to LDS leaders in 2017 — after traveling to the DR a year earlier — and confessed to everything, but they allegedly refused to make a report to law enforcement. His disciplinary hearing was held in June 2017, just eight months before he turned himself in to authorities.

It’s unclear what happened at the hearing, only that “the Church had not made a report to law enforcement,” according to court documents.

In Utah, clergy members are not legally required to report sex abuse if the alleged crimes are made public through the confession of the perpetrator — so it appears that the Mormon Church did not actually violate any laws, according to TTF and KUTV.

An LDS spokesman, however, told The Post that abuse “cannot be tolerated in our homes, society or in the Church.”

“The Church is proactive in its efforts to prevent and address abuse, including a 24-hour help line,” the spokesman said. “When abuse is reported to the help line, local leaders are given guidance to ensure they comply with every reporting requirement of that state or jurisdiction.

“In addition to complying with reporting laws, the Church can proceed with Church discipline based on our doctrines and standards,” the spokesman added. “As part of that process, local leaders teach that full repentance and a return to good standing in the Church requires that the individual resolve all legal obligations required for their actions (reporting to authorities and being accountable for their crimes).”

State Rep. Angela Romero recently announced plans to propose legislation that would erase the clergy exemption, according to KUTV.

Alyk wound up pleading guilty to six counts of voyeuristic image distribution and two counts of sexual exploitation of a minor. He had been charged as a minor, on account of his age at the time he committed the crimes.

Utah’s Sex Offender Registry has him listed as still living at his mother’s home, where he committed the offenses.