A stunned-looking former Ohio judge was dragged limp out of a courtroom following her own sentencing for improperly passing on confidential documents to her brother, footage of the chaotic scene showed.

Tracie Hunter, who worked as a juvenile court judge, was sentenced to six months in jail Monday following a contentious hearing presided over by Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Patrick Dinkelacker, local station WLWT 5 reported.

Following Dinkelacker’s ruling, one of Hunter’s supporters — wearing a “Justice for Hunter” shirt — was stopped and taken into custody as she appeared to charge to Hunter’s defense.

Then Hunter fell limp into the arms of a deputy, who hauled her away — hands under her arms, with Hunter’s feet dragging across the floor — as her supporters yelled that she was being treated “like an animal.”

In July 2013, Hunter’s brother, Stephen Hunter, who worked as a youth corrections officer, allegedly struck a teen offender on the job — prompting his boss to recommend his firing, NBC News reported.

So Tracie Hunter improperly demanded and obtained documents about the teen and handed them over to her brother, prosecutors said, according to the report.

But Tracie Hunter, who was elected in 2010 — marking the first African American elected to the county’s juvenile court — has repeatedly argued that her prosecution was politically motivated, the network reported.

“What she wants is to control the facts,” Scott Croswell, a special prosecutor during Hunter’s 2014 trial, said Monday, according to WLWT. “What she wants to do is write the law.”

But Hunter’s attorney, David Singleton, argued that his client has suffered enough already.

“She’s lost everything almost,” Singleton said. “She lost her job as a judge, her law license, her ability to earn an income. She’s lost peace of mind.”

Dinkelacker received multiple letters and recommendations urging him not to place Hunter behind bars — but ultimately, he was unfazed.

Hunter is being housed at the Hamilton County Justice Center’s medical facility, likely because of the effects of a car crash from three decades ago that caused severe injuries, the local station reported.

Hunter will be evaluated to determine if she can participate in early release programs, according to the report.