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‘Burberry Bandit’ Cornell Neilly Nabbed Again After Six Manhattan Bank Heists in Three Months

Last updated: January 17, 2026 12:50 pm
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‘Burberry Bandit’ Cornell Neilly Nabbed Again After Six Manhattan Bank Heists in Three Months
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Cornell Neilly walked out of federal prison in May 2024 vowing to stay clean; by October he had allegedly robbed six more banks, proving supervised release is no match for a serial bandit who once warned the court that jails are “crime schools.”

Cornell Neilly, the 34-year-old Manhattanite whose designer-taste stick-ups earned him the tabloid nickname “Burberry Bandit,” is again behind federal bars after a three-month spree that netted just under $3,000 from tellers across Chelsea, the West Village and Midtown South, according to a new indictment filed Friday.

FBI Acting Assistant Director Vanessa Tibbits called the August-to-October run “a bank employee’s worst nightmare,” noting Neilly allegedly slid handwritten notes demanding exact sums while already on supervised release for a 2021 robbery that sent him away for 26 months.

Timeline of a Relapse: 17 Months of Freedom, 90 Days of Chaos

  • May 2024: Released from federal prison after serving roughly 85 % of a 26-month sentence.
  • August 2024: First new alleged robbery—Chelsea branch, $600 taken.
  • September 2024: Four additional attempts or completions within 19 days.
  • October 2024: Final heist two blocks north of Madison Square Park; arrest follows.
  • January 17, 2026: Federal grand jury returns six-count indictment; Neilly held without bail.

Prosecutors say Neilly never violated supervised-release rules on paper—he reported to probation, submitted drug screens and held a part-time kitchen job—yet managed to hit banks within walking distance of his Lower East Side halfway house.

Cornell Neilly in a 2024 surveillance still taken inside a Manhattan bank branch
Surveillance image shows Neilly wearing a camel-hair topcoat similar to the Burberry pattern that spawned his nickname.

Designer Addiction or Mental-Health Failure?

Family members told investigators Neilly’s bipolar disorder went untreated after state clinics closed his case file for non-attendance. In a 2022 sentencing memorandum he wrote, “jail doesn’t rehabilitate you… I learned how to rob a bank from someone in jail,” a warning now cited by prosecutors to oppose any future release.

Despite 34 prior robbery arrests, Neilly received supervised release last year when Judge Jeffrey Gershuny declined the government’s request for $50,000 cash bail. That decision became political lightning-rod fodder after The Post revealed Gershuny was later demoted for brandishing a personal firearm on the bench in an unrelated Brooklyn gun case.

Empty Tills, Big Symbolism: Why $3,000 Matters

Neilly’s alleged take averages $500 per target—an amount that triggers federal jurisdiction yet barely covers a single Burberry scarf. Criminologists see the spree as textbook “ritualistic robbery”: the cash is secondary to the adrenaline of outsmarting a system he believes failed him.

Federal prison gate at FCI Elkton where Neilly completed his prior sentence
Neilly walked out of FCI Elkton in May 2024 warning probation officers he felt “institutionalized” and feared relapse.

Policy Fault Lines: Bail Reform vs. Public Safety

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Damian Williams used the arrest to press Congress for tougher supervised-release penalties, arguing current law lets career robbers cycle through federal halfway houses with minimal cash deterrents. Reform advocates counter that Neilly’s case spotlights mental-health gaps—the city’s post-incarceration therapy wait-list averages 34 days, double the national standard.

Expect the indictment to test 18 U.S.C. § 2113 sentencing enhancements: if convicted on all counts, Neilly faces up to 20 years mandatory under the “three-strike” provision for repeat bank robbers—effectively a life sentence for a 34-year-old who has spent 12 of the past 14 years incarcerated.

Bottom Line

Neilly’s re-arrest is more than a quirky crime story—it’s a real-time stress test of federal re-entry policy, judicial discretion and the city’s fractured mental-health pipeline. With bipartisan calls to tighten supervised-release conditions, the “Burberry Bandit” may end up catalyzing legislation that makes federal bail far stricter for repeat violent offenders, even when the loot is pocket change.

For the fastest, most authoritative breakdown of New York crime, policy fallout and high-profile federal cases, bookmark onlytrustedinfo.com—your first stop for what happened and why it matters before the competition wakes up.

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