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Former jail official is indicted for extortion after making his employees perform humiliating tasks at his home
Former jail official is indicted for extortion after making his employees perform humiliating tasks at his home

Daily Mail​

time29-05-2025

  • General
  • Daily Mail​

Former jail official is indicted for extortion after making his employees perform humiliating tasks at his home

A former Virginia jail official is facing federal charges for allegedly using his position to force employees to repair his home for free. Thomas Brady, 53, the former Deputy Superintendent for Jail Operations at the Norfolk County Sheriff's Office, was arrested Wednesday and charged with four counts of extortion and three counts of using interstate facilities to commit bribery and extortion. According to charging documents, Brady allegedly ran the scheme between 2021 and May 2023, coercing employees to carry out maintenance work at his home during and after work hours. One employee was reportedly ordered to install a showerhead and replace a water heater. Another was tasked with repairing the home's heating system instead of reporting to work. A third employee replaced a hot water circulator pump - twice, according to the US Attorney's Office for Massachusetts. All three employees feared retaliation or job-related consequences, including losing their preferred schedule or position, if they refused Brady's demands, NBC Boston reported. In one instance, an employee told their Deputy Superintendent they were unavailable for work. The next morning however, instead of reporting to the Sheriff's Office, the employee allegedly went to Brady's home to begin work on the water heater. That day, the employee reportedly disconnected the existing water heater, loaded it into their truck, and drove Brady and the old unit to Home Depot. Brady allegedly purchased a new 50-gallon water heater, which the employee then transported back to the residence, installed, and afterward went to the office to finish their shift, according to official documents. Prosecutors also cited a text message from the employee to another staff member, warning them that Brady was looking for them. Mike Ramponi, a licensed plumber who worked for the Norfolk County Sheriff's Department before retiring last year, told NBC Boston he was among those Brady directed to leave mid-shift to work on his home. 'I didn't feel comfortable leaving and going there, but you know, basically, the boss said, "Go do it,"' Ramponi said. Texts obtained by NBC Boston investigators show Ramponi informed his supervisor he was heading to Brady's house. Brady then sent him the address and door code, and noted the circulator pump that needed replacing was left on top of the dryer. 'I felt like that if I didn't go there and do it, there would be repercussions towards me, you know?' Ramponi said. 'He could do anything … change my shift.' The State Ethics Commission found that Brady violated conflict of interest laws multiple times by having subordinate employees perform plumbing work at his home during and outside of state work hours. The commission said Brady neither paid the plumbers nor reimbursed the Sheriff's Office for the value of the state work time spent on the repairs. Brady was terminated from his position earlier this month, according to NBC Boston. Brady pleaded not guilty in court and was released on a $10,000 unsecured bond. A court date has not yet been scheduled. If convicted, he faces up to 20 years in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $250,000 fine for the extortion charges. The charges related to use of interstate facilities to commit bribery and extortion carry a maximum of five years in prison, three years of supervised release, and a $250,000 fine, according to the US Attorney's Office.

Tom Brady — no, not that one — charged with extorting sheriff's office employees
Tom Brady — no, not that one — charged with extorting sheriff's office employees

Yahoo

time28-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Tom Brady — no, not that one — charged with extorting sheriff's office employees

The former deputy superintendent of the Norfolk County Sheriff's Office was arrested Wednesday on charges he extorted employees to perform free labor at his home. Thomas Brady, 53, of Norwood, was indicted by a federal grand jury on four counts of extortion and three counts of use of interstate facilities to commit bribery and extortion. According to the U.S. Attorney's Office, Brady served as assistant deputy superintendent for jail operations at the sheriff's office from 2021 to May 2023. From December 2021 to mid-November 2022, he ordered subordinate maintenance employees to do repair work at his home both during and after work hours, beginning with installing a new shower head in late 2021. Brady drove one of the employees, referred to in charging documents as 'Maintenance Officer A,' to his home to install the shower head during the employee's work shift, then drove them back to the sheriff's office to complete their shift, officials said. Then, on Sunday, Feb. 13, 2022, Brady contacted Maintenance Officer A to fix his water heater, according to charging documents. The employee was busy that day, but went to Brady's home the next day instead of going to work. There, they disconnected the broken water heater and drove it and Brady to Home Depot, where Brady purchased a new 50-gallon water heater that Maintenance Officer A brought back to his house and installed. The employee then drove to the sheriff's office for the rest of the work day. On Oct. 6 of that year, another employee, referred to as 'Maintenance Officer B,' went to Brady's home during work hours after Brady asked them to fix his heating system. Brady contacted the employee again later when he had subsequent issues with the heating system, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office. In a text exchange on Oct. 15, a coworker, 'Maintenance Officer C,' told Maintenance Officer B that Brady was looking for them. 'What the [expletive] do I do,' Maintenance Officer B wrote back. On Nov. 1 and 2, Maintenance Officers B and C went to Brady's home, where they drained the hot water system, removed the circulator pump and installed a new pump, officials said. Maintenance Officers A and B told federal investigators that they feared if they didn't follow Brady's orders, they would lose their preferred shift, their position or their job at the sheriff's office. Brady was expected to appear in federal court in Boston Wednesday afternoon. The charge of extortion provides for a sentence of up to 20 years in prison, three years of supervised release and a $250,000 fine. The charge of use of interstate facilities to commit bribery and extortion provides for a sentence of up to five years in prison, three years of supervised release and a $250,000 fine. Market Basket CEO Arthur T. Demoulas placed on paid leave Charlie Woods, son of Tiger Woods, wins 1st AJGA tournament Social media clamoring for Red Sox to call up Roman Anthony after another ugly loss After a noisy launch, Mass. Senate's response to Trump is in park Trump proposes a 15% cap on foreign students at Harvard Read the original article on MassLive.

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