Russian hackers are trying to influence the fight over net neutrality, and New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman says the feds are refusing to cooperate with investigations into the fraud.

The FCC is planning to ax the Obama-era laws, which ensure all web traffic is treated equally and which prevent internet service providers from arbitrarily withholding bandwidth or access to certain websites.

The agency is required to take public input on the plan, and 400,000 comments — all originating from a single Russian web address — are supporting the regulations.

But there are also bogus remarks against the net-freedom rules — including ones logged by names such as Jesus Christ, Homer Simpson and even Barack Obama.

“The unprecedented regulatory power the Obama Administration imposed on the internet is smothering innovation, damaging the American economy and obstructing job creation,” begins an identical letter submitted several times under those names.

Some letters use the identities of real New Yorkers, according to Schneiderman.

“My office analyzed the fake comments and found that tens of thousands of New Yorkers may have had their identities misused in this way,” Schneiderman, a net neutrality supporter, wrote in an open letter posted to Medium.

“In an era where foreign governments have indisputably tried to use the internet and social media to influence our elections, federal and state governments should be working together to ensure that malevolent actors cannot subvert our administrative agencies’ decision-making processes,” he continued, alluding to Russia’s influence on the 2016 election via bot-driven fake news campaigns.

Phony comments have shifted the balance in favor of repealing net neutrality, according to Schneiderman rep Amy Spitalnick.

“If you remove the seemingly fake comments and petitions without actual signatures, 98 percent of comments were pro-neutrality,” she said.

But the FCC says that more than 7.5 million of the total 22 million comments received are bogus pro-neutrality comments.

A spokesman could not immediately say whether that operation was based in the US or elsewhere, but the office called Schneiderman’s investigation a witch hunt.

“This so-called investigation is nothing more than a transparent attempt by a partisan supporter of the Obama Administration’s heavy-handed Internet regulations to gain publicity for himself,” a spokesman said in an e-mailed statement.

Hackers also shut down the FCC comments website’s servers by overloading them with fake user traffic in what is called a denial-of-service attack, according to Jessica Rosenworcel, a Democrat and one of the FCC’s five commissioners.

“In short, the FCC’s process is broken,” she said. “To remedy this, it is essential that the Commission get out to hear from the public first-hand just as this agency has done in the past under both Republican and Democratic leadership.”

There are an additional 50,000 the comments the FCC has failed to enter into the record, she added.

The five-member commission, composed of two Democrats and three Republicans, is expected to scrap the net neutrality provisions next month.