The inspector general’s report on the FBI and Justice Department’s probe of Hillary Clinton’s private email server found that several G-men — including former director James Comey — used “personal email accounts for official government business,” a violation of bureau protocol.

IG Michael Horowitz discovered five instances in which Comey either drafted official messages or forwarded emails to his personal account, the Washington Post reported.

His investigation also found that controversial agent Peter Strzok, who had texted his FBI colleague and lover Lisa Page that “we’ll stop” Trump from being elected, used his personal email for official business.

Strzok told the IG’s investigators that he was only trying to reassure Page that Trump would not win the election and not to signal that the feds were out to get Trump.

The IG said the “most troubling” instance was when Strzok forwarded “an email about the proposed search warrant the midyear team was seeking on the Weiner laptop” on Oct. 29, 2016, from his FBI account to his personal email, a reference to a laptop shared by Anthony Weiner and his wife, Huma Abedin, which had Clinton’s emails on it.

The FBI at the time was exploring Clinton’s own use of a private email account on a personal server while she was secretary of state.

The report was critical of Comey, Strzok and Page, but concluded that Comey did not act out of political bias and that Strzok’s personal views did not affect his performance in his role investigating Russia and Clinton.