Metro

Rape accuser says Rubenstein fed her pot cookies

The Al Sharpton aide who says she was raped by a prominent Manhattan attorney tested positive for marijuana use in the days after the alleged sexual assault, according to sources.

And her lawyers are now accusing the attorney, Sanford Rubenstein, of feeding her pot-laced cookies.

“Any positive test for narcotics in the system of the victim only supports the belief that she was drugged,” the woman’s lawyers, Keith White and Kenneth Montgomery, told The Post in a statement.

“Our client was in her attacker’s home just days before the test and it would be consistent with her ingesting something at her attacker’s home where Mr. Rubenstein gave the victim cookies,” the statement said.

White and Montgomery added that their client “does not smoke or do any drugs.”

The 42-year-old National Action Network exec went home with Rubenstein, who secured a nearly $9 million settlement for police brutality victim Abner Louima, after a 60th birthday party for Sharpton on Oct. 1.

The Manhattan district attorney ordered a drug screening days later because the woman told investigators she kept passing out at Rubenstein’s Upper East Side penthouse and woke up feeling “foggy,” implying that she may have been drugged.

Toxicology results did not detect any date rape drugs in the National Action Network executive’s bloodstream.

Rubenstein’s counsel, Benjamin Brafman, scoffed at the pot cookie claim.

“I‘m not going to comment on what she may have eaten in Mr. Rubenstein’s apartment, but she did not eat a cookie with or without marijuana,” Braufman said when he learned about the allegation.

“This woman was not drugged and everything she did in that apartment, as we have maintained from the beginning, was voluntary and consensual,” Brafman added.