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Former Tyco chief executive L. Dennis Kozlowski (C) leaves the Manhattan Criminal Court after being found guilty on all but one charge 17 June 2005 in New York City. Kozlowski and former Tyco finance chief Mark Swartz were accused of taking $542.4 million in unauthorized bonuses in the form of cash, shares and company loan reductions. Swartz and Kozlowski are on trial for the second time after the first case ended in a mistrial when a juror said she had been threatened.  (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP)  FOR NEWSPAPERS AND TV USE ONLY
Former Tyco chief executive L. Dennis Kozlowski (C) leaves the Manhattan Criminal Court after being found guilty on all but one charge 17 June 2005 in New York City. Kozlowski and former Tyco finance chief Mark Swartz were accused of taking $542.4 million in unauthorized bonuses in the form of cash, shares and company loan reductions. Swartz and Kozlowski are on trial for the second time after the first case ended in a mistrial when a juror said she had been threatened. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP) FOR NEWSPAPERS AND TV USE ONLY
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A former business titan convicted more than a decade ago in a notorious corporate fraud case that featured headline-grabbing tales of excessive spending is now board chairman of a New York City nonprofit that helps ex-prisoners re-enter society, the group announced Tuesday.

Ex-Tyco International CEO L. Dennis Kozlowski, who served 6½ years behind bars after he and another executive were convicted of looting the security systems company of $600 million, said he was honored to lead The Fortune Society’s 31-member board.

“I was fortunate where I had a support system and was able to have family and friends to help me land on my feet,” he said. “But most people don’t have that and most people need a lot of help.”

The group serves about 5,500 formerly incarcerated people every year with help getting jobs, housing, health services, education and anything else they need.

JoAnne Page, the group’s president and CEO, touted Kozlowski’s business experience and passion for the work, saying in a statement he “has already proven himself to be an inspirational leader.”

An inquiry into whether Kozlowski evaded paying millions of dollars in taxes on art turned into a sprawling investigation into his use of Tyco funds for lavish spending, including a $6,000 shower curtain.

Prosecutors from the Manhattan district attorney’s office also detailed a $2 million toga party he threw on the Italian island of Sardinia in 2001 — complete with an appearance by Jimmy Buffett and an ice sculpture of Michelangelo’s “David” urinating vodka.

Kozlowski, who told a parole board in 2013 his crimes were motivated by greed, said his only desires now are to run his own general business consulting practice and help The Fortune Society.

“I’ve moved on from all of that,” he said of the 2005 scandal.

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