State Attorney General Letitia James was quite proud of herself for winning a $2 million judgment against President Trump for misusing his Trump Foundation charity. But surely the Rev. Al Sharpton’s nonprofit merits similar scrutiny.

As The Post’s Melissa Klein and Georgett Roberts reported last weekend, Sharpton sucked in more than $1 million last year from his National Action Network charity: salary of $324,000, a $160,000 bonus and $563,000 in “other compensation” — which NAN says it owed him for a stretch from 2004 to 2017 when it supposedly underpaid him.

NAN claims it hired an executive compensation firm that found it shorted him $1.25 million over those years. Gee, what a convenient finding for the Rev, who runs the group that hired the firm. And how kind of him to take $500,000 less.

Please. This sets “scam alert” warnings flashing for anyone who’s watched Sharpton operate. Last year, he had NAN pay him $531,000 for the rights to his life story. His salary has been near or above a quarter of a million for years. (Who knew civil rights activism can be so lucrative?)

The Post has reported on scores of CEOs and companies who’ve written checks to Sharpton or NAN, clearly to avoid negative publicity. And he, his companies and NAN have long faced major tax issues. He still owes nearly $700,000 in back taxes, the state says.

Meanwhile, James targeted Trump for using his charity for his political campaign. She boasts she sought to “protect charitable assets and hold accountable those who would abuse charities for personal gain.” Sharpton sure seems to fit that bill.

“No one is above the law,” she says, “not a businessman … not even the president.” Her office did not reply to questions Monday, but her stated standard should require her to probe a man who’s somehow made a fortune “fighting” for civil rights.