Click to email this to a friend (Opens in new window)

Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)

Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)

Lava Records founder Jason Flom has made a fortune with chart-topping artists Lorde and Jessie J — but his estranged wife, Wendy, is reportedly dead broke after a six-year divorce battle that is still not over.

“She is behind on her maintenance at the San Remo [apartment building], her parking garage, the baby sitter . . . she can’t afford groceries,” a friend of Wendy told me.

Though their divorce trial in Manhattan Supreme Court ended a year ago, Wendy is still awaiting a settlement decision.

Jason, the son of legendary Skadden Arps mergers-and-acquisitions maestro Joe Flom, told me, “Everybody in this process would like to get it done.”

The estranged couple has a daughter, 21, and a son, 16, but Wendy has not even been getting child support.

“He’s cut off all her access to funds,” Wendy’s lawyer Dana Stutman told me. “He’s starving her out.”

Flom lost many millions of dollars investing with Ronnie Gilley, who is serving a federal sentence of six years and eight months, after pleading guilty to offering bribes to Alabama legislators to legalize gambling.

“Jason maintains that Wendy is responsible for half the loss,” said her friend.

Jason — who flies private to Aspen, Colo., bought a Bentley last year, and has $13 million in trust, according to Wendy’s team — wouldn’t discuss the divorce any further, or comment on his current girlfriend, Raquelle Lucero.

But Jason, who is on the board of directors of the Innocence Project, will be moderating “A Conversation on Justice” April 17 at the Beacon Theatre, featuring the two appellate lawyers from “Making a Murderer.”