Accused Sarah Lawrence sex trafficker Lawrence Ray made nearly $2 million in just two years by forcing one of his victims into prostitution, federal prosecutors alleged in court Monday.

Ray, who was ordered held without bail at the hearing in Manhattan federal court, kept records of the ill-gotten cash, a federal prosecutor said.

One typed document shows that the unidentified woman handed over $700,000 in 2017, according to prosecutors. In 2018, the same woman turned over more than $1 million to the accused sex trafficker, a second ledger shows. Prosecutors believe the woman was seeing more and more clients to meet Ray’s demands.

The ledgers marked dates and amounts that prosecutors have matched to text messages sent by Ray and his associates.

The cash payments were collected by a female associate of Ray’s and deposited into bank accounts that he had access to, prosecutors said in court.

The 60-year-old former friend of disgraced NYPD Commissioner Bernie Kerik allegedly created a Nxivm-like sex cult to prey on his daughter’s classmates at Sarah Lawrence College — all while allegedly extorting the classmates.

Ray’s alleged conduct came to light in a 2019 New York magazine article, which sparked a federal investigation and led to his arrest in February.

His defense attorney on Monday blasted the article as “salacious” reporting that led to sensationalized coverage of his case.

It also emerged Monday that Ray was found in bed with another alleged female victim when federal agents arrested him in Piscataway, NJ, on Feb. 11.

Ray, who was the legal “guardian” of that woman, had groomed her and subjected her to extreme physical and mental abuse, prosecutors charged.

He forced that unidentified woman — a former college roommate of his daughter — to have sex with other men while he filmed, and berated her while he filmed her sobbing, prosecutors said.

Authorities also recovered video of Ray grabbing her by the hair and physically throwing her out of the New Jersey house, prosecutors alleged.

Prosecutors said Ray deprived that woman and another alleged victim who lived in the Piscataway house of sleep and food — abuse that “broke their spirits.”

They noted the accused sicko had installed a lock on the house’s refrigerator door and subjected them both to harsh verbal abuse.

At Monday’s bail hearing, Ray’s court-appointed defense attorney pleaded with the judge to release him on bail, arguing he had family to stay with in Staten Island and a friend who offered to put him up in New Jersey.

Judge Kevin Fox sided with prosecutors, who highlighted the amount of evidence they had in the case and urged Ray to be kept behind bars.