Members of a nonprofit Queens cemetery’s board plundered its coffers and made off with money meant to keep the burial grounds running, according to a suit filed by State Attorney General Letitia James.

The suit claims that seven current and former execs on the board of Lutheran All Faiths Cemetery — a not-for-profit located in Middle Village, Queens — paid themselves exorbitant salaries, embezzled, took out personal loans and mortgages for family and paid out bogus retirement money while continuing to work.

“The Defendants each violated their fiduciary duties of loyalty and care by: paying themselves millions of dollars in salaries, unauthorized retirement benefits, and directors fees without any meaningful consideration of cost or controls,” the Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit filed Tuesday alleges.

Cemetery President Daniel Austin Sr., who sat on the board for 30 years and was compensated to the tune of $5.4 million for the gig, allegedly staged a fake retirement in 2014 for which he was paid a $900,000 “retirement award” — then continued to work and collect a salary until he was fired in March for not repaying the retirement award.

“Austin Sr. could not have obtained the payments that he did without a complete failure of internal controls of the Cemetery,” the lawsuit says.

And his son Daniel Austin Jr. allegedly embezzled $63,000 by giving himself unapproved bonuses for four years, according to the court papers. He resigned after the alleged theft was discovered.

An accountant and lawyer for the board were paid unchecked salaries and fees of over $1 million from 2013 through 2018, the court documents claim.

In July 2015, a board member illegally took out a $400,000 loan for his daughters. And yet another board member took out a $500,000 loan for his brother in July 2017, the suit alleges.

The suit seeks to recoup the stolen funds, as well as restitution. The AG also wants the remaining three board members who were caught up in the scheme to be fired.

Phone numbers could not be found for Austin Jr. and Sr. It was not immediately clear who their lawyer is.

Messages left with the cemetery were not immediately returned.