🚨 The Gutter Report: LFTG Vice President Seany B Faces Violation for Working a Legal Job
Why Parole is Blocking Seany B From Working a Legit Job
🕴️ A man of honor: Seany B suited up, proving growth and elevation.
From Hustler to Hard Worker
Seany B, Vice President of LFTG Radio, is facing a new kind of violation — not from the streets, but from his parole officer. After years of surviving by any means necessary, Seany finally locked down his first legal job at Utopia Security. For the first time, he had a steady paycheck, pride in his work, and a reason to wake up early that didn’t involve the corners.
But instead of applauding this transition, Parole Officer Smith is threatening to violate him if he doesn’t quit. Her reasoning? She didn’t “approve” the job.
That’s not law — that’s power tripping.
đźš— From the streets to new beginnings: Seany B out in Staten Island, living clean and free.
The Past They Won’t Let Go
Seany’s name, government Tysean Moore, is no stranger to Staten Island headlines. He was one of 11 people indicted in the “Stem the Tide” investigation, a 2017 takedown of a crack cocaine distribution network out of the South Beach Houses. Years later, he pleaded guilty and was sentenced. The appellate court upheld that sentence — but nowhere did the law say he couldn’t come home and build a new life. That was supposed to be the point of parole: a chance to re-enter society and do better.
📜 The old headlines: “Operation Stem the Tide” mugshots, where Seany was painted as just another statistic.
🕶️ Tysean Moore’s mugshot — the state’s attempt to define him by a moment in time.
What the Law Says
Under New York State parole conditions, individuals are required to maintain employment or actively seek it. Employment must usually be reported and approved by the assigned parole officer. But the approval process was designed to make sure parolees aren’t working jobs that conflict with their conditions — not to deny legitimate opportunities for the sake of control.
Nowhere does the law forbid a parolee from working as a security guard unless the position involves firearms, law enforcement credentials, or direct conflicts with prior convictions. And in Seany’s case, it’s not even that — he isn’t a guard at all. He’s a watchman. His responsibilities are limited to monitoring the property, keeping eyes open, and contacting security or staff if he sees something out of order.
He has no weapon, no badge, and no authority to intervene. It’s legal, it’s legitimate, and it’s exactly the type of job parole is supposed to encourage.
The Grievance Game
As if it wasn’t insulting enough, his parole officer told him: quit your job and file a grievance. Think about how backwards that is. Instead of letting a man keep working and then investigating the issue, they want him unemployed and waiting on paperwork.
It’s the same trap the system always sets: force you to lose stability, then blame you for falling. A grievance form is supposed to protect parolees from abuse of power, not become another hoop to jump through after stripping them of the very progress they’ve made.
đź“„ The grievance form: proof of how parole tries to bury progress in paperwork instead of supporting it.
Growth You Can’t Fake
I’ve seen Seany’s progress with my own eyes. From the very first time he DM’d me after coming home, I knew he was serious about changing the narrative. Since then, I’ve watched him stay consistent — working every day, keeping his head clear, showing up for himself and for the brand.
If I didn’t do anything right with LFTG, the one thing I did right was making him my Vice President. That title wasn’t for clout. It was recognition of his character, his work ethic, and his loyalty.
This isn’t a “social media friend.” This is the same man who protected me and fed me up north in Franklin. A man who stood on honor when it mattered most. A man who lives by the rules of real gangsters and made men.
The Double Standard of “Reform”
Let’s call it what it is: hypocrisy.
The system preaches rehabilitation — then punishes men for actually rehabilitating.
They say get a job — then block the very jobs that keep people off the block.
They say stop selling drugs — then push brothers back toward the same survival hustles they’re trying to escape.
This isn’t just about Seany. It’s about the message parole sends to every young Black man on Staten Island: that you’re more valuable to them as a statistic in a cell than as a citizen with a paycheck.
LFTG Stands 100% Behind Seany
Let me be clear: LFTG Radio stands behind Seany B — right or wrong.
He’s more than a VP on paper. He’s family. He’s proof that growth is possible, and he’s living evidence that you can go from survival mode to stability. They want him back in the headlines for the wrong reasons. We want him in the spotlight for the right ones.
If New York really believes in second chances, it’s time for parole officers like Smith to stop weaponizing technicalities and start supporting brothers who finally choose the 9-to-5 over the 25-to-life.
🗞️ LFTGRadio.com
📺 YouTube: LFTG Radio
Not for clicks — for clarity.
Good morning and Godspeed.
— Elliott Carterr