Criminal charges will be dropped against the reality TV show doctor and his girlfriend who were accused of raping and drugging seven women in California, prosecutors said.

Orthopedic surgeon Grant Robicheaux, who appeared on the 2014 Bravo reality TV show called “Online Dating Rituals of the American Male,” was charged in late 2018 along with his girlfriend, Cerissa Riley, after a search of the surgeon’s Newport Beach home, according to a statement issued Tuesday by Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer.

At the time, former Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas — Spitzer’s predecessor — alleged that investigators had recovered videos of up to 1,000 incapacitated women who were sexually assaulted by Robicheaux and Riley.

Spitzer said the case then received “international media attention” based on allegations involving that many victims, prompting five other women to come forward with additional allegations in connection with the initial charges involving two women on Sept. 11, 2018.

Robicheaux and Riley had both faced up to life in prison if convicted of the charges, including rape by use of drugs, oral copulation by use of anesthesia and assault with intent to commit a sexual offense.

But Rackauckas later admitted in a sworn deposition in June 2019 that he used the case to attract publicity during his re-election campaign, leading Spitzer to order a complete review of the case, the district attorney said.

The review of evidence — including thousands of photographs, hundreds of hours of audio recordings and emails from alleged victims — revealed that not a single video or photograph of an incapacitated woman being sexually assaulted by Robicheaux or Riley was found, Spitzer said.

Investigators could also not identify a single independent witness who alleged that the pair sexually assaulted an unconscious woman.

“The prior district attorney and his chief of staff manufactured this case and repeatedly misstated the evidence to lead the public and vulnerable women to believe that these two individuals plied up to 1,000 women with drugs and alcohol in order to sexually assault them — and videotape the assaults,” Spitzer’s statement read.

While saying he could not undo the injustice done by Rackauckas, Spitzer said he would dismiss all charges against Robicheaux and Riley.

“What the prior district attorney and his chief of staff did to these defendants and to the women involved in the case is a travesty,” Spitzer’s statement continued.

A message left on a cellphone listed to Rackauckas was not immediately returned Wednesday.