The woman who says former New York Knick Kristaps Porzingis raped her later sent him explicit photos of herself and tried to shake down the team’s legal department for cash — all before reporting the alleged crime, according to a new report.

The unnamed 29-year-old woman, who says Porzingis forced himself on her inside his posh Manhattan apartment hours after suffering a devastating knee injury Feb. 7, 2018, contacted the Knicks’ legal department to “mediate in private” a $68,000 payment, ESPN reported, citing copies of her emails and text messages.

She communicated with franchise lawyers from October to early November but did not file a police report until Thursday, when she walked into the 10th Precinct station house and reported Porzingis beat her and called her a “bitch” and “my slave” during the encounter.

NYPD sources have said the accuser is “believable.”

But the woman stayed with Porzingis from the alleged 2 a.m. rape until 11 a.m. and “enjoyed the rest of the time I spent with him,” she told the Knicks in an email. She later sent text messages to the 23-year-old Latvian seeking intimate time and even sent him explicit photos of herself, ESPN reported.

The accuser, who lives in the same apartment building as Porzingis, also became increasingly enraged that the basketball star was cordial in the hallways but did not return her text-message overtures, according to the report. Later, she claimed that Porzingis agreed to pay her $68,000 for her little brother’s college tuition “as a soothing gift even though I didn’t ask him to,” and presented the Knicks with an agreement the two had allegedly signed.

But talks with the Knicks broke down in November, when the team told her it “decided to retain counsel to represent [Porzingis] and they will be in touch with you shortly. The New York Knicks will not have any further involvement on Kristaps’ behalf,” the site reported.

Porzingis’ lawyers told ESPN his side believes the $68,000 agreement is bogus.

“Mr. Porzingis denies signing the alleged contract, which we believe is a forgery. When asked to produce the original contract for handwriting analysis, the complainant declined to do so,” said the player’s lawyer, Roland Riopelle.