You gotta problem with us?

A day after their bombshell acquittal on charges they raped an East Village woman, fired cops Kenneth Moreno and Franklin Mata yesterday returned to the courthouse — with significantly more swagger and attitude.

“Don’t you have enough pictures of us already? It’s our day off!” Mata, 29, barked as he and Moreno strolled from a meeting at Manhattan Supreme Court with probation officials who will be recommending their sentence for official misconduct convictions.

Mata and Moreno, 43, will see a lot more days off. The NYPD fired them Thursday right after jurors let them walk on charges of raping a 29-year-old woman in December 2008, but convicted them of misconduct for returning to the drunken woman’s apartment repeatedly.

The rape acquittal outraged City Council members, women’s advocates and more than 300 protestors who rallied yesterday in lower Manhattan to decry the “not guilty” rape verdict.

“We won’t be silent! We must stop violence!” chanted a throng outside Manhattan Supreme Court, where protesters carried signs reading, “A badge is not a license to rape,” and “New Rape City.”

“If you’re wondering why women hesitate to report rape and sexual assaults to the police and couldn’t trust the justice system, look no further than the acquittal of officers Moreno and Mata,” said Nancy Schwartzman, 35, a Brooklyn filmmaker who confronted her own rapist on-camera in her documentary “The Line.”

Councilwoman Rosie Mendez (D-Manhattan), at a City Hall rally, said, “As a woman, I was very disappointed in yesterday’s verdict. It says something about how this society views women. Rape has always been a ‘blame the victim’ crime.”

Councilwoman Letitia James (D-Brooklyn) said, “The defendants were presumed innocent when they walked through the door. Unfortunately the victim was presumed guilty.”

And Sonia Ossorio, executive director of the city’s National Organization for Women chapter, said a guilty verdict in the case was deserved given the presence of “physical evidence . . . circumstantial evidence and common sense.”

“Women across this city are angry,” she said.

Moreno’s lawyer, Joseph Tacopina, called politicians’ criticism of the verdict “disgusting” and a reason “why good people don’t want to serve on juries.”

“Seven members of this jury have master’s degrees,” Tacopina noted. “They gave two months of their lives to civil service. They didn’t rush through a verdict, but instead deliberated for a week.”

“This jury had the courage and integrity to follow the law, and that’s what they did, and no one should question that,” he said, adding that the critics “didn’t see one minute of testimony.”

laura.italiano@nypost.com

