He’s got soft-on-crime policy down to a fine art.

Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez is now rewarding accused criminals by allowing them to take art classes instead of facing a judge.

In the “first-of-its-kind” program, suspects charged with some misdemeanor crimes can attend a two-hour class at the Brooklyn Museum — in which they discuss famous artworks then make their own drawings and collages — then get their charges scrubbed, Gonzalez announced Wednesday.

The scheme — dubbed Project Reset — outraged cops, who say Gonzalez should go back to the drawing board.

“I’m honestly flabbergasted … You’re just giving the criminals all the power,” one police source fumed. “What about the victim’s rights?”

To qualify for the program, the person must be charged with a non-violent misdemeanor — including vandalism, criminal mischief or petit larceny — and receive a desk appearance ticket, according to the DA’s office.

At the classes, the suspects get to kick back and learn about colorful and controversial paintings and wax philosophical about subjects such as criminal justice reform. They’re then encouraged to channel their inner Picasso.

“They draw and I tell them I don’t care what it looks like — just draw, be free… We give them passes, drawing books and we invite them to come back and share with their family,” said Kraig Blue, who teaches the classes, at a press conference to announce the program. “When they leave we’ve left the past behind us.”

Afterwards, participants’ charges are dropped, their cases are sealed and they’re no longer required to show up to court.

Gonzalez insisted the sketchy scheme makes the justice system “fairer.”

“It’s about holding people accountable but doing it in a way that promotes human dignity and provides them with tools to contribute back to their community,” Gonzalez said Wednesday. “It will reduce recidivism and make our justice system fairer.”

But police say the program will embolden criminals by removing serious consequences

“You steal from someone but because it’s a low level crime we’re going to put you in an art class?” the police source fumed. “It’s getting scary.”

Fifty-one people have already taken the art classes and had their cases dismissed, Gonzalez’s office says.

The scheme is funded through taxpayer cash from the City Council, along with private funding from the Cohen Foundation, the Tow Foundation and the Art for Justice Fund.