Metro

‘Poor’ little rich call girl could be in tax trouble

Turncoat call girl Rebecca Woodard boasted of wearing Marc Jacobs dresses and Jimmy Choo shoes and raking in thousands of dollars a pop from rich johns — but when it came to the federal government, she pleaded poverty, public documents show.

In a June 2007 Chapter 7 bankruptcy filing, Woodard claimed she had no job and zero income, and sought liquidation of a staggering $280,346 in debt.

She told the court she had a measly $106 in the bank, spending just $30 a month for clothing and $250 for food, with monthly expenses of $1,785, most of it rent, the filing shows. Woodard even got the court to waive the bankruptcy filing fee, amounting to a couple hundred dollars, claiming she was a pauper.

Yet, in her new tell-all tome, “Call Girl Confidential,” she brags that she bedded CEOs and politicians including former Gov. Eliot Spitzer, sometimes making “$6,000 to $7,000 a day’’ working for Manhattan madam Kristin Davis.

Woodard claims she went to work for Davis in 2005, and stayed with her until jumping ship to work for Hockey Mom madam Anna Gristina before Davis’ 2008 arrest.

She pampered herself, Woodard claims in the book, with regular hair highlights, manicures, pedicures, waxes, frequent facials, spray tanning, false eyelashes, “racks of pretty dresses, several hundred pairs of sexy shoes, and expensive lingerie.’’

But in her Chapter 7 filing, Woodard claimed to have just $300 worth of clothing.

Experts told The Post Woodard could find herself facing federal prosecution if the IRS decides to scrutinize her tax returns.

Woodard claims she went to work for Davis because the big-bucks payout would allow her to support her young daughter and pay off legal fees from her nasty 2005 custody battle with ex-beau and Spin Doctors frontman Chris Barron.

In her bankruptcy filing, however, Woodard claims she had absolutely no means of financial support in 2007, and listed her daughter — who at the time was being supported by Barron — as a dependent.

She owed nearly $9,000 in back taxes to the IRS and New York state, and another $4,860 to the state Department of Labor for “unemployment overpayment,’’ the documents show.

The bulk of her debt was loans and credit-card bills, including nearly $40,000 to American Express and $8,095 to Saks Fifth Avenue, and even $47 to Columbia House Records.

Woodard also claimed about $3,500 in medical bills and $12,500 in eviction charges from apartments in Brooklyn and Midtown.

In the filing, Woodard — who has worked as an Applebee’s waitress and a secretary at two media firms — said she made $29,643 in 2006 and $53,738 in 2005, from unspecified “employment.’’

Woodard did not respond to a request for comment.

Manhattan prosecutors blasted Woodard’s claims in her book that they ordered her to continue hooking while working undercover to help bust Hockey Mom madam Anna Gristina, for whom she also worked. In fact, they said, she refused their orders to stop her sex work.

Woodard also claims she had violent sex with Spitzer, during which he grabbed her throat and made her fear for her safety.

Spitzer’s spokeswoman has called the claims “an absolute fabrication.’’