Hows this for family values? City Councilman Larry Seabrook shook down his own relatives for thousands of dollars after hiring them to work for non-profits he showered with taxpayer money, the feds charge.
In court papers tied to the Bronx Democrats ongoing corruption trial, prosecutors say his mistress is prepared to testify that she paid Seabrook cash kickbacks that he demanded for getting her consulting jobs between 2002 and 2004.
That testimony coupled with evidence of more than $75,000 in unreported cash that Seabrook deposited in the bank clearly supports the inference that Seabrook received kickbacks from the money he steered to his nonprofits as salary for his mistress and family members, prosecutors Brent Wible and Steve Lee wrote.

GIMME MONEY, HONEY: The feds charge Bronx City Councilman
Larry Seabrook took a piece of the action from fees paid to his mistress,
Gloria Jones-Grant (left), and relatives for work they did for nonprofit
organizations he allegedly controlled using public money.

Gloria Jones-Grant
The feds say Seabrooks girlfriend, Gloria Jones-Grant, will testify that she gave him thousands of dollars in cash from the $9,600 a shady Bronx pharmacy paid her after Seabrook arranged for her to do lobbying or consulting work in early 2003.
Jones-Grant also will say that she gave Seabrook some of the $7,000 she got from an unidentified Yonkers politician from whom Seabrook procured a job for her in the summer of 2004, according to the court filing.
Jones-Grant has been granted immunity to force her to testify against Seabrook, whose trial is expected to wrap up next week.
The Manhattan federal court filing says bank records will confirm Jones-Grants expected testimony and show that she kept paying Seabrook kickbacks after she was named executive director of two nonprofits he allegedly controlled.
Court papers also say Seabrook made several cash deposits within days of his relatives getting paid with funds from the same nonprofits.
In one case, his brother, Oliver Seabrook, allegedly deposited more than $25,000 from the North East Bronx Redevelopment Corp. on Aug. 23, 2006, withdrawing $11,000 in cash between Aug. 25 and Aug. 30.
Several days later, on Sept. 6, 2006, Larry Seabrook deposited $1,400 in cash into his account, all in $100 bills, prosecutors wrote.
In another case, the feds say NEBRC issued Seabrooks sister, Priscilla Jenkins, a $10,000 check on Jan. 30, 2007, for preparing a brief report on efforts to increase racial diversity in the FDNY.
One week later, on Feb. 12, 2007, she purchased two money orders totaling $2,000, court papers say.
Three days after that, on Feb. 15, 2007, Seabrook deposited these very money orders into his bank account.
Seabrook never reported any of the cash to the IRS.
Seabrooks lawyers didnt respond to an e-mail seeking comment last night.