Four Hofstra U. hoops players today were charged with burglary for a slew of brazen thefts from fellow students’ dorm rooms, authorities said.

The trio of freshmen and one sophomore players systematically stole more than an estimated $20,000 worth of Apple electronics products from six dorm rooms at the Hempstead, LI, university — then sold the boosted gear to “live a more lavish lifestyle,” Nassau County, cops said.

“They were particularly fond of Apple products — MacBooks, iPads, iPods, iPhones — and these items are valuable,” said Police Lt. Raymond Cote. “The items were sold on Craigslist, they were pawned, sold to other students, they were sold on the street.”

“They are prominent figures on campus, and because of their social status they would have access to dorm rooms and would get into areas,” Cote said of the players. “The items that we charged have been stolen exceeds $10,000. The items that we believe were maybe stolen far exceeds that. We won’t know until your coverage goes out how many students were victimized”

The hoopsters were nabbed after a female student at Hofstra on Tuesday named used an Apple application to locate her iPad, which had been stolen this month, authorities said. She saw that her iPad had been re-registered to sophomore transfer player Shaquille Stokes, of Harlem, cops said.

If convicted, the four players — Stokes, Jimmy Hall, Dallas Anglin and Kentrell Washington — stand to lose full scholarships that worth up to $200,000 apiece. Court records say that all four men admitted to stealing at some of the items from dorm rooms.

The Brooklyn resident Hall, 18, told cops that Stokes boosted a laptop from a dorm suite while Hall was in a room in that suite asking a girl he knew whether she would “be down to have some fun with me and my teammates” by having group sex with them, court records show. When the girl, who refused Hall’s offer, later noticed the laptop was gone and asked him to check with his teammates whether any of them took it, Hall denied they had the computer, records allege.

“I know what I did was wrong and I am very sorry for what I got myself involve with,” the freshman told cops, according to court records. “I am willing to pay back these people for my losses. I will never do this again.”

Hall , the Hofstra Pride’s second-leading scorer this season, told cops he stole several MacBook Pros because “I needed some money.” He later posted the swiped laptops for sale on Craiglist using the contact email jimjetson1@gmail.com — and later sold one of them for just $350, which he then uses to pay his phone bill, buy food and for other expenses.

He also said that when the ring once stole a Sony laptop, they became angry after realizing “it wasn’t a MacBook.”

The arrests come weeks after the Harlem resident Stokes, 20, was granted a hardship transfer waiver from his first school, the University of Hawaii, allowing him to begin playing for Hofstra this year without sitting out a year as normally required of transfers.

The sophomore, who has since started six our of seven games for the struggling, 3-and-4 Hofstra, received that waiver because he wanted to be closer to his family and to an ailing grandmothers.

Stokes, a star when he played at Lincoln HS, was slapped with the most serious set of charges — five counts of felony burglary.

Hall was charged with four counts of burglary, the Las Vegas, Nev., resident Washington, 18, was charged with two counts of the same crime, and Anglin, an 18-year-old resident of Montclair, NJ, was charged with a single count of both burglary and tampering with evidence.

None of the defendants has prior criminal charges, although Hall was booted off the national powerhouse basketball team of St. Anthony HS in Jersey City, NJ, last year because of undisclosed conduct violations.

All four men were sullen as they were arraigned today in Nassau County Supreme Court.

Stokes, wearing an Addidas shirt and sweatpants, was ordered held in lieu of $25,000 cash bail on five counts of felony burglary.

Nassau County prosecutor Leemor Peled said Stokes on one date went into two separate dorm rooms and stole an iPad and a computer, and on three other dates went into three rooms and also took iPads.

“He has no criminal involvement whatsoever before this incident. He has every reason to and will return,” said his lawyer Frank Whelan, who cited Stokes’ community ties and his status as a scholarship athlete in an unsuccessful bid to get Stokes released on his own recognizance.

But in rejecting that request, Judge Eric Bjorneby noted, “There are statements to the police where the defendant admitted that he participated in some of these crimes.”

The prosecutor said Washington is accused of taking an iPod Touch and a MacBook Pro from a Hofstra dorm room on Oct. 4, with Stokes and Hall.

“He will fight these charges because this will have an effect on his scholarship status,” said Whelan, who also represented Washington at arraignment.

Washington was ordered held in lieu of $5,000 cash bail, Hall was held on $10,000 bail and Anglin on $2,000 bail.

All defendants except for Anglin — walked free after posting bail — remained in jail today.

St. Anthony HS’s legendary hoops coach Bob Hurley Sr., who had suspended Hall twice last year, said “I feel very bad for Mrs. Hall, who I think has tried to do the right things for her son, and I feel very bad for Mo Cassara and the Hofstra basketball program for giivng him a chance and this turning out to be where it is right now.”

“I was forced last year because of failure to adhere to rules at school to dismiss from the team two-thirds through the season,” Hurley noted.

“Anytime something like this happens, [there’s] no explanation for something like that, one kid or four kids. It’s mystifying that things like this are happening or happened.”

So far, about $10,000 worth of stolen items have been recovered, and authorities expect to recover items worth a similar amount, they said.

Hofstra has suspended all four players from basketball team, classes, residence halls and facilities, pending the outcome of the case.

Hofstra’s vice president of university relations Melissa Connolly said the school’s public safety department worked with Nassau County police on the probe.

Last month, Hofstra suspended players Taran Buie and Jamal Coombs-McDaniel, for violating team rules. The suspensions were for two preseason events and two regular-season games. Hofstra cited student privacy laws in providing no further information in that case.

Additional reporting by Kate Kowsh

Additional reporting by Kate Kowsh