The “Brick Man” burglar, who has come to symbolize the failure of state bail reform because he keeps getting cut loose only to be arrested again, was busted in three more burglaries on Wednesday, sources said.

Ex-con Anthony Manson — who earned his nickname because he allegedly uses masonry to aid his smash-and-grabs — was arrested Wednesday and charged with breaking into a construction site in Brooklyn’s Prospect-Lefferts Gardens section the previous day, according to sources.

“I was trying to steal something to sell for some food,” Manson told cops upon his arrest at the site on New York Avenue near Lenox Road as he gave officers the bogus name of “William McKoy” and lied that he was 60 years old, sources said.

Manson was rummaging through boxes at the construction site and smashed a glass door there with an unknown object during the 1 a.m. break-in, the sources said.

He was hit with one count of burglary and false impersonation, authorities said.

While in custody, cops also linked him to two back-to-back Brooklyn burglaries in Boerum Hill on Jan. 14, authorities said.

Manson allegedly chucked a brick at an apartment building on Dean Street near Third Avenue and stole packages from the lobby at 4:40 p.m., police said.

Just 10 minutes later, the ex-con made his way down the block and allegedly busted his way into a residential building using a rock, authorities said.

He was hit with charges of burglary, criminal mischief, petit larceny and criminal possession of property in the Boerum Hill incidents.

Manson has been called a poster boy for the state’s new law that prevents judges from assigning bail for most misdemeanors and nonviolent felonies — because he is accused of committing six burglaries since his no-bail release on Dec. 23 in a trio of break-ins.

Two days before Christmas, Manson was busted for three burglaries he allegedly committed in Brooklyn earlier that month — and was promptly released on Christmas Day thanks to the new law, which passed in April and was observed by some courts as early as October before it formally took effect Jan. 1.

Manson was arrested on Jan. 3 in two more break-ins, on Jan. 2 and Jan. 3. Prosecutors sought to have him held on $15,000 bail during his Jan. 4 arraignment, but he was instead freed on supervised release.

Early on Jan. 15, Manson was again collared when police spotted him smashing the door to the Center Stage Optique eyewear store in Greenwich Village, according to court papers.

Cops caught him inside the store with a suitcase stuffed with $3,995 worth of sunglasses and a rock, court papers said.

He was arraigned the next day, but cut loose without bail — despite being under investigation for six similar burglaries in Manhattan at that point.

According to law-enforcement sources, Manson has 75 arrests on his record dating back to 1991. State records also show he has done two stints in prison — for robbery and selling drugs.

The accused serial burglar was in police custody at Kings County Hospital for a psych evaluation after his Wednesday arrest, according to a Brooklyn Criminal Court clerk.