Silk Road creator Ross Ulbricht tried to get his life sentence for drug trafficking and money laundering vacated Monday — but a judge immediately tossed the request, citing procedural issues.

Ulbricht’s attorneys argued his sentence should be thrown out because his lawyers at the time failed to advise him to take a plea deal that could have resulted in a lighter sentence.

Manhattan federal court judge Lorna Schofield promptly declared the filing “moot,” as one of Ulbricht’s former lawyers — the ones he says did a bad job — haven’t filed paperwork formally withdrawing from the case.

The judge gave Ulbricht, who went by the name “Dread Pirate Roberts” while running the notorious black-market website, until Sept. 6 to refile his request that the court throw out his June 2015 sentence.

Jurors convicted the 35-year-old in February 2015 on various raps related to running the dark net site, which let users buy and sell methamphetamine, cocaine, heroin and other illicit items using bitcoin.

As part of the sentence, feds seized $48 million from Ulbricht.

Ulbricht previously appealed in the Second Court of Appeals and the US Supreme Court but did not prevail in either attempt. He’s serving out his time at Arizona’s maximum security prison, USP Tuscon.