Radio host Michael Smerconish went on a bizarre tangent on his SiriusXM show Tuesday as he sparred with callers over whether feds should’ve called a locksmith before they raided Jeffrey Epstein’s Upper East Side mansion and damaged his “gorgeous” front doors over the weekend.

“I’m bothered by the way in which they used crowbars on his front door because I think it was entirely unnecessary,” said Smerconish, who hosts “The Michael Smerconish Program” on Sirius’ POTUS Channel.

“This is the feds saying what you want to say which is ‘Screw this guy. He did all these things even though he hasn’t had a trial. We want to leave the scar of our entry on his front door so the media can see it,'” he said.

Smerconish’s remarks followed his tweet before the show, asking whether the feds could have “used a locksmith on those doors.”

His case for the preservation of the convicted pedophile’s home set off a firestorm Tuesday as callers dialed in to question whether his outrage was misdirected.

“You are focusing too much time on the outrage of doors when there’s way more important things to be outraged about,” one caller said.

But the host doubled down on his comments, saying, “I saw something that I thought was really odd or misplaced and I decided to comment.”

Smerconish insisted that he wasn’t defending Epstein but took issue with how the feds gained entry into his $77 million home at 9 E. 71st St.

“I believed Jeffrey Epstein has slept in this house for the final time,” Smerconish said. “It’s not about him. It’s a case of how the government approached that.”

“No one is as dopey as the host of this program in even raising this issue,” he said. “No one’s going to ask the Southern District, ‘Why did you use a crowbar?’”

Feds cracked through the heavy oak doors of Epstein’s home late Saturday and early Sunday, according to court documents, and recovered the financier’s stash of child pornography stored inside a safe.

The multimillionaire financier was busted Saturday on sex trafficking and conspiracy charges. He has pleaded not guilty.