The Minnesota cop who shot and killed a bride-to-be over the weekend had only two years on the force — and was already being sued over an incident in May, according to a report Monday.

Mohamed Noor joined the Minneapolis Police Department in March 2015 and was celebrated as his precinct’s first Somali-American officer.

He and two other officers are being sued by a woman who claimed she was injured when the officers came to her home May 25 and took her to the hospital, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported.

She claimed that constituted false imprisonment, assault and battery and that Noor “grabbed her right wrist and upper arm.”

The tragic weekend shooting unfolded as Noor, 31, and his partner, identified as Matthew Harrity, responded to a 911 call reportedly made by Justine Damond of a possible sexual assault in an alley near Damond’s home late Saturday.

Noor was in the passenger seat and allegedly opened fire across Harrity, shooting a pajama-clad Damond, 40, several times through the driver’s-side door, KSTP-TV reported.

No weapon was found at the scene.

“We take this seriously with great compassion for all persons who are being touched by this,” Noor’s attorney, Tom Plunkett, told CBS Minnesota.

Meanwhile, Damond’s fiancé. Don Damond — whose name she was already using — said he and his family were “utterly devastated” by her “homicide,” and called on police for more information.

“Our lives are forever changed as a result of knowing her,” he said through tears. “She was so kind and so darn funny. She made us all laugh with her great wit and her humor.”

Noor and Harrity were both placed on standard administrative leave. Neither the officers’ body cams nor the dashcam of their patrol car was turned on that night.

“Why? Why did you do it? He has no idea the impact that he had on thousands of people. No idea,” the victim’s heartbroken stepson, Zach, told Fox 9 in Minneapolis. “I hope that he wakes up every single day and thinks about it, and then I hope that he thinks about how he can be a better person because that’s what she did every single day.”

Damond, who worked as a spiritual mentor, moved to the US from Australia in 2015 after meeting and falling in love with Don.

“It was a difficult decision for her to make,” her close pal Eloise King told the Sydney Morning Herald. “She was committed to love and the relationship that was there for her.”

The shooting is being investigated by the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.

Minneapolis Police Chief Janee Harteau called what happened a “clearly tragic death.”

“I understand why so many people have so many questions at this point,” she said in a statement Monday. “I have many of the same questions.”

With Wires