Russian agent Maria Butina was released from a Florida prison Friday after serving more than 15 months for conspiring to influence US conservative activists and infiltrate the NRA — and is expected to be immediately deported to her country.

The 30-year-old gun rights enthusiast had been scheduled for release from the low-security Tallahassee Federal Correctional Institution in early November, but a change in federal law moved up her release date based on credit for good behavior, said her attorney Robert Driscoll.

She was the first Russian citizen convicted of crimes relating to the 2016 election, but her efforts were separate from the sweeping election-meddling outlined by former special counsel Robert Mueller.

Butina, who studied at American University in Washington, has been in custody since her arrest on July 15, 2018. She plans to return to her hometown of Barnaul in Siberia, according to CNN.

She told CNN this year she has no plans to become a TV star in Russia, a reference to the celebrity that Russian intelligence agent Anna Chapman gained when she returned to the Motherland as part of a 2010 spy swap.

“I’m not a circus bear,” Butina said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has expressed “outrage” over Butina’s prison sentence, insisting that she did not carry out any orders from Russian security services.

Butina pleaded guilty in December to one count of conspiring to act as a foreign agent and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors.

She admitted to conspiring with a Russian official and two Americans to infiltrate the National Rifle Assocation — the powerful lobby closely aligned with US conservatives and Republican politicians including President Trump — and create unofficial lines of communication to try to shape Washington’s policy toward Moscow.

The Russian official with whom she conspired was identified as Alexander Torshin, a deputy governor of Russia’s central bank. He was never charged in the case, but was slapped with sanctions by the US Treasury Department.

One of the two Americans referred to in her case was her boyfriend, conservative political activist Paul Erickson, who was not charged for his links to Butina, but was indicted on unrelated wire fraud and money laundering charges in South Dakota. His case is still pending.

In addition, Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne resigned in August after confirming a Fox News report that he also had an intimate relationship with Butina.

Last year, the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs accused the US of forcing Butina to make a false confession to “absolutely ridiculous charges” of being a Russian agent.

“It’s not clear what she was convicted of or what crime she committed,” Putin said in April. “I think it’s a prime example of ‘saving face.’ They arrested her and put the girl in jail.

“But there was nothing on her, so in order not to look totally stupid they gave her, fixed her up, with an 18-month sentence to show that she was guilty of something.”

With Post wires