A lawyer for the off-duty cop accused of fatally shooting a motorist during a road rage incident again tried to paint the dead man as an “anti-social” individual during testimony Monday.

Medical Examiner Dr. Jay Stahl-Herz had been discussing the three gunshot wounds sustained by victim Delrawn Small​ ​when attorney Stephen Worth bellowed​ ​–​ ​in front of jurors​ ​–​ ​that Small had a tattoo that read: “Go f–k yourself.”

Assistant Attorney General Joshua Gradinger​, who is handling the prosecution, ​immediately objected, and the jurors were rushed out of the courtroom.

“How is that relevant,” Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Alexander Jeong tiredly asked Worth, who represents officer Wayne Isaacs.

“It shows he’s an antisocial individual,” Worth shrieked. “One of the things we’ve been trying to show is the menacing nature of the deceased.”

Worth continued to yell over the judge, again complaining Jeong had refused to allow jurors to hear about Small’s criminal history.

“You kept out his over ten years in jail,” the lawyer boomed, before cheekily asking if the autopsy report would be redacted so jurors couldn’t read the lewd tattoo.

“I move to exclude the entire autopsy report,” Worth added. “Doesn’t common sense tell you that someone who writes ‘go f–k yourself’ on their arm has a problem with society.”

“I understand that he jumps and screams and yells, but he knows he’s not allowed to do this,” Gradinger interjected, referring to Worth. “It’s been at least 10 years to the day that [Isaacs] killed [Small] since that he had a felony conviction.”

“There is absolutely no chance the defendant could have seen that tattoo,” Gradinger insisted.

“I struggle to accept your hypothetical argument,” Judge Jeong said to Worth, before saying “Let’s not have this issue again, please?”

Small, 37, was hit three times. The fatal shot pierced his aorta.

The medical examiner also testified that Small would have lost consciousness in 10 to 15 seconds, and been dead in three to ten minutes. CPR could not have saved him, Stahl-Herz said.

Jurors also saw photos of the bloody tank top cut off of Small after he was shot. Isaacs alleges the man punched him after getting out of a traffic light in July 2016, forcing him to shoot in self defense.

If convicted of charges of second-degree murder, Isaacs faces up to 25 years behind bars.

His trial continues Wednesday.