A former Yale student who was acquitted of rape and then expelled amid accusations of a violent threesome is now suing the university for $110 million, according to reports.

Saifullah Khan alleged in a lawsuit filed Friday that the Ivy League institution denied him an education and ruined his reputation after he was accused of raping a fellow student in fall 2015, the Hartford Courant reported.

Khan, a native of Afghanistan who began attending Yale on a full scholarship in 2012, was suspended from classes and then ordered to leave campus after the woman alleged to university officials that the neuroscience major had raped her in 2015.

A jury acquitted Khan last year.

He returned to the university in fall 2018, despite a petition signed by more than 77,000 people seeking to keep him off campus.

He was suspended again in October of that year after reports of another alleged act of sexual misconduct appeared in the Yale Daily News, according to the New Haven Register.

Khan, according to the report, allegedly slapped another man during a threesome in June 2018 with the victim and a woman while in Washington, DC — an accusation that led to his unlawful dismissal from the university, his attorney claims.

“There’s no doubt in my mind that the process Yale used to engage in its fact-finding was fatally flawed,” attorney Norman Pattis said in January.

The lawsuit names Yale president Peter Salovey and several deans and administrators as defendants, the Register reported.

When reached for comment by The Post, Karen Peart, a Yale spokeswoman, said the university does not comment on pending litigation.