Metro

‘Sad sack’ Giant rolled: One-night-stand gal steals 500G in jewelry

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New York Giants defensive tackle Shaun Rogers picked a woman up at a Miami Beach hot spot and brought her back to his room at the Fountainebleau — where she waited until he passed out, and then robbed him of almost $500,000 of bling.

The 6-4, 350-pounder told cops he was out partying with a man and woman Sunday night at the hotel’s Club LIV, which draws A-list celebs like Lebron James and Jay-Z.

Flashing his jewels — worth about half of the $1 million contract he inked with Big Blue last month — Rogers easily won over the party girl, and the two couples headed back to his room at around 7 a.m.

The three-time Pro Bowler, 34, told police he stashed the jewels in the room safe as soon as he got back, and eventually went to sleep while the others kept partying.

When he woke up at about 12:30 p.m., his date had disappeared, and he tried to get into the safe to check on his pricey bangles and ice.

But he couldn’t get the door open.

“Hotel security was called, and after some difficulty was able to open the safe. The victim realized most of his valuables were missing,” a Miami police report states.

Rogers, who is not married, didn’t know his date’s name, but was able to provide cops with a phone number of a woman who was with her in the club earlier.

“The suspect has not been ID’d. Unknown exactly who she is at this point and time,” Miami Detective Vivian Hernandez of the Miami Police Department wrote in an e-mail to The Post.

It wasn’t Roger’s first brush with trouble.

In June 2007, he was accused of sexually assaulting a stripper, though charges were never filed because of a lack of evidence.

On April Fools Day 2010, Rogers was busted at Cleveland Hopkins Airport for having a loaded gun in his carry-on luggage.

Rogers played 11 years in the NFL before coming to the Giants.

Rogers did not play a game for Big Blue because of a blood clot in his leg — and the Giants signed him to a one-year contract worth $1 million last month.

Big Blue had no comment, and Roger’s agent, Kennard McGuire, did not return messages seeking comment. Rogers himself could not be reached.

Additional reporting by Paul Schwartz