Best-selling crime novelist Linda Fairstein, the former Manhattan sex-crimes prosecutor portrayed in a new movie as having railroaded the former “Central Park Five,” was dropped by her publisher, Dutton, on Friday.

The publisher has “terminated its relationship” with Fairstein, a Dutton spokeswoman said.

It’s the latest fallout for Fairstein from the Netflix dramatization, “When They See Us.”

In the series’ wake, Fairstein has stepped down from several prestigious nonprofit positions, resigning from the boards of the Safe Horizon victims-services agency, God’s Love We Deliver, and the Joyful Heart Foundation.

Fairstein is the author of 24 books, including 16 New York Times bestselling crime novels, as well as a nonfiction work that was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year.

Fairstein’s most recent book, “Blood oath,” came out in March.

She declined to comment to the Associated Press Friday.

“Each of these organizations does great work,” she told The Post earlier this week. “It’s so foolish of the bullies to punish the charities. Totally pig-headed and stupid.”