A cop who was forced to retire due to trauma he suffered in the Pulse nightclub massacre is now suing the city of Orlando and its police department — claiming his bosses harassed him after he developed PTSD.

Gerry Realin, who was assigned to remove bodies from the bar after terrorist Omar Mateen fatally gunned down 49 people in June 2016, filed the $1 million suit Friday, claiming he was “repeatedly harassed, intimidated, threatened with discharge and coerced” after he filed for workers’ compensation.

“We feel that the facts are very clear and compelling that there was harassment and retaliation almost from the time Mr. Realin came forward,” his lawyer Goeff Bichler told News 6.

“Maybe the most shocking is the fact that one of Officer Realin’s superiors followed him to an appointment with a psychiatrist and then essentially tracked him down at a gas station after the appointment to confront him.”

The suit accuses Deputy Chief Orlando Rolon of following Realin, 37, to the gas station to tell him that he needs to “get over it and move on,” the lawsuit said.

Realin’s suit also contends that his team didn’t have proper safety equipment while clearing bodies from Pulse for five straight hours, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

The department told the newspaper that it hasn’t seen the suit, but that the ex-cop is receiving the early-retirement benefits he was earlier this year — 80 percent of his $70,000 yearly salary for life.

“Following the Pulse tragedy, when Mr. Realin was unable to come to work, he was offered counseling and was paid his salary for over a year,” it said in a statement to the Sentinel. “At that point, Mr. Realin voluntarily requested a full disability pension, which the city granted.”

But Realin now pays $1,700 a month for health coverage — more than five times the amount he paid while he was still a cop, News 6 reports.

The suit comes just days after another Pulse responder with PTSD, Cpl. Omar Delgado, was forced into retirement six months before he’s entitled to full pension benefits.