Former New York Jet Kellen Winslow Jr. was convicted Monday of raping a homeless woman in California — one of a slew of sexual-misconduct charges brought against the former tight end.

Winslow was also convicted of indecent exposure and lewd conduct involving two other women at his trial in San Diego Monday evening.

The jury was expected to keep deliberating on another rape allegation by a 54-year-old hitchhiker, as well as by a woman who said Winslow sexually assaulted her while she was unconscious in 2003, when she was a teenager.

All five of his accusers testified at the trial.

Winslow, who also played for the Cleveland Browns, Tampa Bay Bucs and New England Patriots, was with the Jets in 2013.

The 58-year-old homeless woman testified that Winslow befriended her in Encinitas, a beach town north of San Diego, and invited her to have coffee with him in May 2018. He then raped her next to his car, she said.

Another woman, a 57-year-old, testified that he exposed himself to her while she was gardening in May 2018. Winslow was found guilty of indecent exposure for the incident.

And a 77-year-old woman who went to the same gym as Winslow in Carlsbad said he inappropriately touched himself in front of her while he was out on bail in February. He was found guilty of lewd conduct in that case.

After news of his arrest broke last year, a woman accused Winslow of raping her while they were at a party in a San Diego suburb in 2003.

That accuser was a 17-year-old high-school student at the time and Winslow, now 35, was 19 and home from college for the summer.

She claimed she passed out while at the party and woke up to find Winslow sexually assaulting her.

A hitchhiker also testified that she met Winslow in Encinitas in March 2018. He picked her up, drove her to a shopping center in the beach community and raped her in his Hummer, she said.

Prosecutors described the athlete as a “wolf in sheep’s clothing” who would sexually prey on the most vulnerable people.

His defense attorneys argued the women were trying to cash in on the multi-million-dollar fortune he made during his career in the NFL.

They also maintained that all the sexual encounters were consensual.

Winslow did not take the stand at his trial.

Winslow’s father, Kellen Winslow Sr., was a legendary tight end for the San Diego Chargers and is enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

With Post Wires