Metro

Subway vandals from Spain avoid jail for graffiti spree

The three graffiti vandals who trekked from Spain to New York City to deface the subways have copped to no-jail plea deals.

Taggers Ignacio Dominguez-Robles, Manuel Cobano-Pareja and Ricardo Espinola-Martinez all pleaded guilty in Brooklyn Supreme Court to charges of felony criminal mischief and misdemeanor criminal mischief for sullying MTA trains across the city.

As part of the plea, each has to cough up $1,092.12 in fines to cover the cost of the damage — but will avoid time behind bars if they stay out of trouble for a year.

Dominguez-Robles was sentenced Wednesday, while his cohorts are expected to return to court June 19 for sentencing.

The trio were tracked down with the help of international police organization Interpol after the NYPD began noticing “European-style” graffiti in subway stations on April 11.

The Spaniards were nabbed on April 16, when cops caught them posing for photos in front of freshly-inked tags.

“In my country [it] is not illegal to do graffiti,” Dominguez-Robles explained to officers following his arrest, according to court papers.

Cobano-Pareja offered a similar statement to police, saying: “In Barcelona, it is not as serious as it is in New York City.”

The men have already cut similar plea deals in Manhattan and the Bronx, but still have cases pending in Queens.