He’s not crazy – he just has a personality disorder!

Salvatore Perrone, 64, the unbalanced Staten Island man accused of three heinous serial killings made several bizarre outbursts in court today as the judge revealed details about the psyche evaluation that found him competent to stand trial.

“According to the doctors, this thought process reflects a grandiosity on his part that is more consistent with a personality disorder rather than a mental disease or defect,” Brooklyn Supreme Court Judge Alan Marrus said.

“According to these two doctors, the defendant appears to be cleanly groomed, does not suffer from any hallucinations or delusional thinking, and understands the charges against him.”

The Post exclusively reported the results of the court-ordered psyche evaluation in today’s paper.

Perrone interrupted Marrus several times to vent his demands.

“I’m being charged with three serious crimes and I’ve never seen any police reports. I’m unaware of these crimes,” said Perrone, who also asked for his daughter, claiming, “She’s the only person I trust who can clear me in this matter.”

But Brooklyn assistant district attorney Melissa Carvajal said Perrone’s family doesn’t want anything to do with him.

“It’s my understanding that his ex-wife and his daughter do not want any contact with him or to speak to his doctors,” Carvajal said.

Defense attorney William T. Martin said he refused to provide prosecutors with a cheek swab from Perrone because prosecutors haven’t yet turned over police reports written after the murders.

The families of Perrone’s victims packed the Brooklyn Supreme Court courtroom.

Two women started crying even before the alleged serial killer entered court.

“This guy aggravates me every time I see him. He’s playing crazy so he won’t go to jail,” said Moe Gebeli, the son of slain shopkeeper Mohamed Gebeli. “We should get it over with. I want justice to be served.”

The mustachioed Perrone allegedly shot the three shopkeepers to death with the same .22 rifle in separate attacks last summer and fall, prosecutors charge.

Perrone gave investigators bizarre explanations for the grisly murders after he was caught, court documents show.

The mustachioed Perrone told cops he was working for the “Palestinian section of the CIA” and that he watched two different Middle Eastern men shoot and kill the first two victims.

He even claimed one of the Middle Eastern men forced him at gunpoint to stab the second victim, while “insulting him by saying that Italians have no balls,” court papers show.

Perrone will next appear in court April 12.