Two women testified in court on Friday that they found a hidden camera in a faux-DVD player while subletting a Queen St. condo from a television actor last year.

J.P. Manoux, known for his role on the CTV sitcom Spun Out, as well as other shows in the U.S., is on trial for two counts of mischief relating to the camera. Two voyeurism charges were dropped in July 2015.

The 47-year-old actor rented a condo at 1171 Queen St. W., and connected with the two women online in late 2014, when he was going to be working in Los Angeles for four months, according to testimony heard Friday. They agreed to pay two-thirds of the rent and stay there from January to April 2015, the women told the court.

Their names are covered by a publication ban.

One of the complainants testified that she and her roommate “felt like they were being watched” in the condo, because Manoux knew she had moved in early and once texted to accuse her of lying that her roommate wasn’t home when he called. She said they searched for cameras and couldn’t find any, and then scoured the Internet for products that can hold secret recording devices. That’s when they found an image of the DVD player, which they had previously ignored because they always watched Netflix, she said.

“I didn’t know how to react, what to do, where to call,” she said. “I don’t want to ever rent again. Everywhere I go now I’m looking for cameras.”

Manoux’s lawyer, Adam Weisberg, described the DVD player as a home security device with a camera, and asserted in cross-examination that the agreement between his client and the women was that Manoux was still a “roommate,” and that their presence was similar to house-sitting while renting two bedrooms.

The complainants said they felt the entire unit was their rented space, and Weisberg suggested they were lying because it’s “advantageous” in their civil suit against Manoux, in which they each claim $185,000 for invasion of privacy. Both women disagreed.

The trial continues at Old City Hall on Oct. 25.