The woman charged alongside her boyfriend in the case of missing Connecticut mom Jennifer Dulos has been rearrested on fresh charges, according to reports.

Michelle Troconis turned herself in on Thursday to state troopers in Bridgeport, the Stamford Advocate reported.

She was released around 3 p.m. after posting bond.

Troconis is expected to face an additional charge of tampering with evidence in connection with Dulos’ disappearance — a day after Fotis Dulos, Jennifer’s estranged husband, was rearrested on the same charge.

Jennifer was last seen May 24 after dropping her five kids off at school.

Both Fotis and Troconis were arrested in June on charges of evidence tampering and hindering prosecution. They have pleaded not guilty and were freed on $500,000 bail.

Troconis told investigators that Fotis had a Toyota pickup truck washed “because the body of Jennifer at some point was in there,” according to his arrest warrant.

Police said they found a “blood-like substance” inside the truck and that it tested positive for Jennifer’s DNA.

During a June 6 interview with detectives, Troconis admitted that she and Fotis wrote what police are calling “alibi scripts” to “help them remember” details of what they did on May 24 and 25, according to Fotis’ warrant.

“Both notes included information, which was subsequently proven to be inaccurate, events which Troconis was forced to admit during questioning had never happened, and they included alibi witnesses who were later determined to be false,” the document said.

Police said a man bearing a striking resemblance to Fotis was caught on surveillance video dumping garbage bags in Hartford, as Troconis sat in the front seat of his 2014 Ford Raptor pickup truck.

They said she identified herself as a passenger in the vehicle.

Another video allegedly showed Fotis placing a Federal Express package containing an altered license place in a storm drain shortly after Jennifer went missing.

Troconis’ lawyer maintained her innocence following her release on Thursday.

“We have a judicial system in this country which is the foundation of our democracy,” the lawyer, Andrew Bowman, told the Hartford Courant. “The most important parts of that system are the presumption of innocence and trial by jury so I’d like you to remember that Michelle’s presumed innocent and she should be. We’re prepared to let judgment rest in a jury’s hands.”