The Stanford University swimmer convicted of sexually assaulting an unconscious woman has already had his controversial six-month jail sentence reduced, according to a report.

Brock Turner, 20, had two months knocked off his sentence for expected good behavior behind bars, which means he’ll be a free man as early as Sept. 2, according to court documents obtained by The Daily Mail.

He is also in the process of appealing his conviction as well as moving his three-year probation to his home state of Ohio.

Turner faced up to 14 years in state prison but was remanded to Elmwood Correctional Facility in Milpitas, Calif., after a judge sentenced him to just six months in county jail last Thursday.

In the statement he read in court prior to his sentencing, Turner told a different tale of the night of Jan. 17, 2015, when he admitted drinking too much and engaging in sexual activity with a girl he met at a frat party.

His new story detailed how he met the 23-year-old victim, saying they “got close” throughout the night.

“We danced and kissed. Then I asked her if she wanted to go back to my room with me,” he said. “She agreed and we were walking back to my room and she slipped on a slope beside a wooden shed and I got down on the ground with her and we started kissing.”

He continued, “I thought we were in the heat of the moment and I asked her if she wanted me to ‘finger’ her and she said yes. I just thought I would take off her underwear and I ‘fingered’ her for a minute and we were kissing and her arms were on my back. Then we were just kissing and dry humping.”

He added that he “could never rape somebody” and said the only reason he ran away from the two Swedish graduate students who held him down until police arrived was because he felt nauseous.

The story conflicts with details he gave police that January night, when he told them he had just met the girl outside the party and that he had no idea who she was.

It also doesn’t line up with numerous witness statements, including what the Swedish students told cops.

“She was unconscious. The entire time,” Carl-Frederik Arndt told CBS this week. “I checked her and she didn’t move at all.”

Vice President Joe Biden penned a heartfelt open letter Thursday to Turner’s 23-year-old assault victim, crediting her bravery for speaking out about her harrowing experience.

“Your story has already changed lives. You have helped change the culture,” he wrote in the open letter released to BuzzFeed.

Meanwhile, the outrage against Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Aaron Persky over the light sentence he gave Turner continued Thursday, when 20 jurors asked to hear an unrelated case balked at serving in his courtroom, citing the judge as a hardship, according to a report from KPIX-TV news.

The jurors’ actions came as the judge has become the focus of a recall effort and the target of threatening phone calls, according to the TV report.