Jails union boss Norman Seabrook, 6 months out of prison, is looking for a job in politics

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The once formidable correction union boss Norman Seabrook, who spent 21 months in federal prison for accepting a bribe, was released, and heโ€™s looking for work.

โ€œI pass the time by seeking employment. Putting out my resume in certain places,โ€ Seabrook said in an interview. โ€œA lot of people will consider me overqualified for what it is that I’m putting in for.โ€

The longtime leader of the 20,000 member union was known for working political backrooms and for his frontpage showmanship. He influenced staffing decisions and raised awareness of correction officersโ€™ safety and working concerns with public stunts like blocking the bridge to Rikers Island and parading a coffin in front of City Hall.

Seabrook was sentenced in 2019 to four years at the minimum-security Beckley Federal Correctional Institution in West Virginia for accepting a $60,000 bribe in a newly purchased Ferragamo bag in exchange for steering union retirement benefits into a questionable hedge fund. According to the prosecutorโ€™s witnesses, Seabrook was upset that got nothing for investing the unionโ€™s money and declared โ€œItโ€™s time Norman Seabrook got paid.โ€

The fund lost nearly all $20 million that Seabrook invested. Seabrook won early release in March, but still owes $19 million in restitution to the Correction Officers Benevolent Association.

โ€œMy resume is impeccable to some people,โ€ he said, before listing his many political connections. โ€œI’m interested in being a consultant.โ€

Seabrook returned from prison and into the open arms of many of his former COBA members, some 250 of whom organized a $75-a-person fundraiser for him in July. A flier for the event also sought donations through his daughterโ€™s Cash App account. According to attendees, several people sent donations without attending.

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