The wife of the man slain by cops in Charlotte, NC, released Friday a video that she took of the frantic seconds leading up to his shooting in which she is heard screaming: “Don’t shoot him! He has no weapon!”

The video does not clearly show the instant Keith Lamont Scott, a 43-year-old black father of seven, was shot Tuesday or whether he was armed, as the Charlotte-Mecklenburg police have maintained.

“Don’t shoot him! Don’t shoot him! He has no weapon! He has no weapon!” Rakeyia Scott is heard shouting in the two-minute, 12-second video, which began as an officer ordered Keith Scott to drop a gun.

“Gun! Gun! Drop the gun! Drop the f–king gun!” a cop is heard shouting.

Keith’s Scott’s increasingly distraught wife pleads with the ­officers not to shoot him.

“He doesn’t have a gun! He has a T.B.I.,” she shouts, using an ­abbreviation for traumatic brain injury. “He is not going to do anything to you guys. He just took his medicine.”

Family lawyers said Keith Scott was injured in a motorcycle accident in November 2015, The New York Times reported.

As the confrontation escalates in the parking lot of an apartment complex, a cop continues to yell at Keith to drop his gun.

‘He better not be f—ing dead! He better not be f—ing dead! He better live!’ - Rakeyia Scott

“Let me get a f–king baton over here!” he shouts.

Rakeyia Scott tells her husband to get out of his white pickup truck and repeatedly yells, “Keith, don’t you do it! Don’t you do it, Keith!”

Family attorney Justin Bamberg said she was trying to “get him to stand still” after he got out of the vehicle.

But a cop is heard ordering him again to drop the weapon before gunfire erupts and he is killed by Police Officer Brentley Vinson, who also is black.

“He better not be f–king dead! He better not be f–king dead!” the wife screams. “I’m not going to come near you. I’m going to ­record, though.”

The video emerged a day after an image taken by a witness was posted on social media showing an object on the ground near the mortally wounded Keith. Two cops — one in uniform, the other with a vest over a red shirt — are seen standing over him.

Police released the photo with the object circled in red, claiming it was a gun.

CNN quoted a source close to the investigation as saying that a loaded gun had been recovered at the scene and that fingerprints, DNA and blood on it matched Scott’s.

The family’s lawyers told the Times that Rakeyia came out of their apartment with a cellphone charger for her husband when she noticed cops surrounding his vehicle, so she began recording.

Relatives have said Keith was reading a book while waiting for one of his children to be dropped off by the school bus before police arrived at the complex to serve a warrant on someone else.

Authorities say he had a handgun, not a book, refused commands to drop it and posed “an imminent, deadly threat.”

Bamberg said the video did not prove if the shooting was justified — just that it offered “another vantage point” of the incident, which led to riots and a protester’s death in Charlotte.

“One reason why this video is being released,” Bamberg said, “is we wanted to give the city and Police Department the opportunity to do the right thing and release the videos they have available that clarify the situation a bit, and could potentially answer some of the outstanding questions.”

Putney did suggest the videos from a police dashboard camera and a body camera would be released eventually. The family viewed them privately.

Putney has acknowledged that the video “does not give me absolute, definitive visual evidence that would confirm that a person is pointing a gun.”

The Scott family agreed the footage held no definitive answer.

“It is impossible to discern from the videos what, if anything, Mr. Scott is holding in his hands,” the family told the Times.

In other developments:

Putney said the probe into the shooting has been turned over to the state Bureau of Investigation.

A suspect was arrested Friday in the fatal shooting of a protester, Justin Carr, during the riots that followed Keith’s death.

Presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump both delayed scheduled visits to the city after the mayor publicly asked them to.

With Post wires