New England Patriots superstar receiver Antonio Brown allegedly raped and otherwise sexually assaulted a woman who was his personal trainer, according to a federal lawsuit she filed Tuesday in Florida.

Britney Taylor claims that Brown attacked her twice in 2017 and once in 2018 while he was with the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Taylor, a gymnast who met Brown in a Christian student athletes’ group at Central Michigan University, says in the suit that he reached out to her in June 2017 via Facebook, asking for her help in strengthening his ankle flexibility.

It was during two training sessions that Brown began to abuse her, she claims.

In the first alleged incident, he exposed himself and forcibly kissed her without permission in June 2017, she claims.

At another training session weeks later, Brown allegedly sneaked up behind Taylor as she was watching a church service on her iPad at his home. He then masturbated and ejaculated on her back, the court filing says.

“Ewww!” she told him.

“Oh ‘B’ . . . you know, I’m sorry,” he responded before leaving the room, she claims.

Brown and Taylor cut ties for months after that incident, but eventually reunited when he reached out to her again in 2018, she says.

In the third incident, Brown forced her face into a mattress on May 20, 2018, and raped her, the suit states. She tried to fight him off, screaming, “No!” and “Stop!” she claims.

That took place after Taylor went with Brown, another football player and several friends to a club in the Miami area.

Taylor went public with the accusation by filing the lawsuit with her name listed.

“As a rape victim of Antonio Brown, deciding to speak out has been an incredibly difficult decision,” she said. “I have found strength in my faith, my family and from the accounts of other survivors of sexual assault.

“Speaking out removes the shame that I have felt for the past year and places it on the person responsible for my rape.”

Brown claims he had consensual sex with Taylor and accused her of trying to shake him down for money.

“Mr. Brown’s accuser has continually posted photographs of Mr. Brown on her social media in an effort to financially benefit from his celebrity,” his lawyer, Darren Heitner, said in a statement.

“Mr. Brown, whose hard work and dedication to his craft has allowed him to rise to the top of his profession, refuses to be the victim of what he believes to be a money grab,” Heitner added.

Brown, 31, agreed to a one-year, $15 million contract with the Patriots Saturday, just hours after the Oakland Raiders, fed up with his conduct, released him. He had also worn out his welcome in Pittsburgh.

He wanted to get released by the Raiders so badly that he reached out to social-media consultants for advice on how to speed up the process, ESPN reported.

Last Wednesday, he took to social media to thumb his nose at Raiders general manager Mike Mayock, posting a photo on Instagram of a letter Mayock sent him — fining him — for missing an Aug. 22 walk-through. That fine was for $13,950. The letter also mentioned a $40,000 fine for missing practice.

Brown was then suspended from the team after he clashed with Mayock at an ensuing practice, during which he reportedly called Mayock a “cracker.”

The Patriots were caught off guard by the lawsuit ESPN reported, citing sources. They may be place Brown on the commissioner’s exempt list — sidelining him as an active player — while the league investigates, according to the report.

With Wires