The mayor who deprived Newark city of honest services, released from prison

The mayor who deprived Newark city of honest services, released from prisonAccording to the official reports, a former Newark, N. J., mayor who was sent to prison for depriving the city of honest services was released to a halfway house Tuesday.

The New Jersey Star-Ledger has reported that Sharpe James was found guilty by a jury two years ago of selling city-owned real estate for $46,000 to his girlfriend, who then sold it for $660,000.

The Star-Ledger reported that James, also a former state senator and Newark's mayor for 20 years, carried a box out of prison. It contained his 17-chapter book, which has a working title of "A Sharpe View."

James will serve the remainder of his 27-month sentence in a Newark halfway house and will work as a mentor at the Christian Love Baptist Church in Irvington.

He drove buses, made beds and helped fellow prisoners working toward their high school equivalency diplomas, James said.

James further said, "Petersburg Correctional Complex in Virginia is a great federal correctional facility. I've adjusted, I attend chapel. It's been a new experience." (With Inputs from Agencies)