A Manhattan judge Tuesday blasted a fraudster who tried to sway a juror with documents stashed in a Louis Vuitton dust bag, calling him “selfish and manipulative” for stealing millions of dollars from investors.

Justice Juan Merchan then slapped Robert DePalo, 63, with eight to 21 years behind bars, nearly the max for his crimes.

One of those years was for two counts of jury tampering.

The judge had previously released DePalo from custody to recuperate from a failed suicide bid during his grand-larceny trial for scamming investors out of $6.5 million. DePalo then brazenly used his freedom to try to sway the juror by sending him documents and a USB drive in the designer dust sack.

“There is no question your client has been selfish and manipulative,” Merchan told DePalo’s lawyer Tuesday in Manhattan Supreme Court. “This was not a crime of need. This was clearly a crime of greed.”

DePalo had been convicted July 26 of 19 counts of grand larceny, scheme to defraud and other raps.

Prosecutors said DePalo blew through investors’ cash by buying Bentleys, Rolex watches and a $22,000 life-size lawn jockey made of bronze.

“This defendant simply does not care who he harms or what the collateral consequences are for any one else,” said Assistant District Attorney Jose Fanjul, who argued for a stiff punishment.

DePalo’s lawyer, Avi Moskowitz, asked for leniency and described DePalo as “the type of person who would literally take the shirt off his back to help people.”