HACKS COVER TRACKS: Maura Healey, Rachael Rollins escape scrutiny in Violence in Boston Inc. scandal.

Two people who shouldn’t get a pass on the Violence in Boston Inc. indictment are Attorney General Maura Healey and U.S. Attorney Rachael Rollins — both of whom should have been monitoring VIB founder Monica Cannon-Grant more closely.

Healey’s office is in charge of overseeing all nonprofit organizations and there’s no evidence she raised any flags with Cannon-Grant, who was charged by the feds with misusing hundreds of thousands of dollars in grants and donations, and along with her husband, defrauding the federal government of $100,000 in pandemic unemployment benefits.

Obviously, Healey was too busy filing dozens of lawsuits against former President Donald Trump to notice alleged corruption like this, especially when it came to a darling of the media.

This isn’t the first time Healey, the Democrats’ leading gubernatorial candidate, has taken a pass on prosecuting corruption right under her nose, leaving it to the feds to do the dirty work. She’s been especially light on state political misdeeds.

She should now launch an internal review to figure out how Violence in Boston Inc. escaped scrutiny from her office. Was it untouchable for ideological and political reasons?

Rollins, in her previous job as Suffolk District Attorney, handed Cannon-Grant a $6,000 no-strings-attached grant that the feds now claim paved the way for use on personal expenses like meals, rent, trips and nail salons.

Rollins clearly should have done more to track the grant and make sure it was being spent properly on a youth retreat to Philadelphia. It was a serious lapse in judgment on her part.

The new district attorney now says he will do more to track grants from the office’s asset forfeiture division.

Maybe taking asset forfeiture money and handing it out to political crooks should be illegal.