A transgender California high schooler snatched up first place for the girls’ triple jump at a winter championships event Saturday, as the Trump administration launches a federal probe into the state’s transgender sports policies.

AB Hernandez, a Senior at Jurupa Valley High School in Riverside County, recorded a jump of 39 feet and 10 inches, while second place recorded a jump of 39 feet and 3¼ inches at the VS California Winter Championships, according to results posted online.

Hernandez also took home second place in the long jump event, the competition was held at Arcadia High School

VS Athletics — a specialized sporting goods retailer — declined to comment to The Post’s request for comment about Hernandez’s participation in the competition.

AB Hernandez has been competing since she was a freshman in high school. AP

“I get a lot of hate comments, but I don’t really care. I’m a 16-year-old girl with a strong attitude — do you really think I’m going to listen?” Hernandez said in an interview with KCRA last year after she received criticism for competing with female athletes.

Hernandez, who came out as transgender in eighth grade, told the local news station she had received threats and online harassment.

Hernandez finished tied for first place in the girl’s high jump and got first place in the triple jump at another championship event in June, according to a report. Her appearances in the events have sparked controversy over transgender athletes competing in women’s sports.

The trans athlete has consistlenty won in women’s events. AP

Local residents have also protested her participation in women’s-only events, holding signs reading “Save girls’ sports,” “Two Xs, no exceptions,” and “Girls’ sports for girls only” throughout the season.

Hernandez has said in the past she was able to drown out the boos with support from fellow athletes.

“They really made my experience perfect, and I’ll be forever grateful to them,” Hernandez said. “There are people out there who don’t have that kind of support, so I’m very grateful.”

Hernandez’s case has drawn renewed attention after the Trump administration expanded its probe into transgender athletes, placing her back in the spotlight.

The U.S. Department of Education recently added the California Community College Athletic Association — which oversees 108 athletic programs statewide — to its existing investigation into transgender athletes launched last year, an inquiry that has also named Jurupa Valley High School among other schools.

The Trump department of education is investigating California for violation of federal law. AP

“Women’s sports are for women,” said Kimberly Richey, the department’s assistant secretary for civil rights. “The Trump administration will not tolerate policies that erase women’s rights.”

The Supreme Court is weighing cases involving state laws that bar transgender athletes from participating in girls’ and women’s sports, though it has not indicated whether it would challenge states like California that allow athletes to compete based on gender identity.

Under California law, students are permitted to participate in school sports according to their gender identity, not their sex assigned at birth.