Manhattan’s notorious “Burberry Bandit” bank robber was released from jail under the state’s new bail reform laws — only to be bagged again after he allegedly tried to knock over the same lender as before.

Cornell Neilly, 29, who has been busted for more than a dozen bank robberies since 2012, had been out of jail less than a month when he waltzed into a Chase Bank branch on Lexington Avenue on Saturday and handed the teller a note reading, “This is a robbery. $3500 now. Thanks,” prosecutors said.

Neilly lost his nerve when the teller alerted her supervisor — and he ran off, only to be nabbed 45 minutes later, prosecutors said.

“The defendant admitted to the incident and, channeling famed bank robber Willie Sutton, said, ‘I did it because I need the money,'” Assistant District Attorney Jillian Shartrand said during Neilly’s arraignment Sunday. “As the defendant himself noted, he just got out of jail on Dec. 16 because of bail reform.”

Shartrand said he was released “in spite of being charged with stealing over $14,000 from various banks, including the same bank he is charged with trying to rob on Jan. 4.”

Neilly earned the “Burberry” tag after a security camera at one bank caught him wearing a pricey Burberry shirt during one 2012 heist.

That robbery was one of more than a dozen that prosecutors said Neilly attempted or pulled off in 2012. He was sentenced to five to 10 years in prison on those charges in 2014.

New York state inmate records show that he was paroled from the Queensboro Correctional Facility in Long Island City on Jan. 24, 2019.

It didn’t take him long to get back into the game, authorities said.

Neilly was linked to at least seven new bank robberies over a two-week period between June 22 and July 3 — six of them Chase bank branches and the seventh a Citibank.

Among those was a Chase branch on Lexington Avenue, where he walked away with $3,500 on July 10 — the same bank he allegedly tried to rob on Saturday, according to prosecutors.

He was later indicted on charges that he robbed or attempted to rob as many as nine banks on July 29.

He remained behind bars pending trial on those charges until he was released last month under the controversial new bail reform measures — and went back to work.

Neilly is now being held for violating his parole. It was not clear Wednesday why his July arrest did not trigger a similar parole violation that could have kept him in jail despite bail reform.