A jury Tuesday ordered Kabbalah Centre International and one of its former co-directors to collectively pay $127,500 to an ex-KCI student who said she suffered emotional distress after a rabbi made sexual advances toward her during a late-night meeting.

The Los Angeles Superior Court jury deliberated about a day and a half before finding that Rabbi Yehuda Berg was liable for intentional infliction of emotional distress, but not battery, in the lawsuit brought by Jena Scaccetti.

The jury ordered Berg — who has been dubbed the “Rabbi to the Stars” and has appeared in public with the likes of Madonna and Ashton Kutcher, who have studied at the center — to pay Scaccetti $85,000.

The panel also concluded that Berg acted with malice, triggering a second phase of trial that was slated to start Tuesday afternoon to determine if Scaccetti is entitled to punitive damages.

The jury directed the KCI to pay the plaintiff $42,500 after finding that the organization negligently supervised Berg.

Scaccetti, 36, stood, thanked and hugged her lawyer, Alain Bonavida, after the verdict.

Scaccetti testified that she was a member of the KCI in Los Angeles for six years and considered converting to Judaism after ending an abusive relationship with an ex-boyfriend.

She said she was in New York City on business the night of Oct. 25-26, 2012, when she agreed to meet Berg at his mother’s apartment, located in the Kabbalah Centre in that city.

Scaccetti said Berg plied her with alcohol and Vicodin to try and relax her so she would agree to have sex with him, and that he touched her leg and held her in a tight embrace.

She said she only took one of the Vicodin pills and put the rest in her pocket.

Scaccetti, who sued Berg and KCI in January 2014, said she rejected Berg’s advances and that the four-hour visit ended with him calling for a cab to take her home, but only after he seized her phone and deleted all her text messages. She said he also threatened her harm and even death if she told anyone what happened. The former Catholic later left the KCI and abandoned her plans to convert to Judaism.

Berg admitted he was abusing drugs and alcohol at the time. He said he is recovering and left KCI in May 2014.