The feds are seeking tips from the public to shed light on who has been pointing a blue laser at flights landing at JFK Airport – and harming some pilots’ eyes.

“The FBI’s New York Field Office is requesting the public’s assistance in identifying the individual, or individuals, responsible for pointing lasers at inbound aircraft,” the agency said in a statement.

“A blue laser appears to be emanating from the area of Roslyn, New York. Pilots have reported eye injuries as a result of the laser,” it added.

The FBI has seen a recent spike in laser incidents across all the airports in the New York City area. It said the crime is a felony punishable by up to five years in the slammer, up to a $250,000 fine, or both.

“Pointing a laser at an aircraft presents danger to pilots, passengers, and those on the ground,” according to the statement, which did not specify how many flights were affected by the laser or when the incidents took place.

Capt. Lee Moak, president of the Air Line Pilots Association, International, described the risk flight crews face from lasers as unacceptable.

“Pointing lasers at aircraft in flight poses a serious safety risk to the traveling public,” he told CNN. He promised the group would “vigorously pursue anyone who misuses these devices.”

There were 147 reported laser strike incidents in 2018 and 92 this year through Sept. 7 in the metropolitan area, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.

There were a reported 6,754 total laser strikes nationwide in 2017, a 250 percent hike in laser strikes from when the FAA first started tracking the incidents in 2010.