NYC SEAL Swim to Aid Veterans, First Responders

Summary

A 3.5-mile Hudson River swim on Aug. 15 will raise support for veterans, Gold Star families and first responders.

Why this matters

The event highlights veteran transition services and fundraising for organizations serving veterans, Gold Star families and first responders. It also provides practical information for people interested in participating or supporting the swim.

Beyond the Brotherhood, a nonprofit that supports veterans, Gold Star families and first responders, will hold its eighth annual NYC SEAL Swim on Aug. 15 in New York City.

The 3.5-mile Hudson River swim is expected to include active-duty Navy SEALs, veterans, first responders, corporate leaders, athletes and other supporters. Founder Bill Brown, a former Navy SEAL and attorney at Parlatore Law Group in New Jersey, said the event is intended to help veterans reconnect after military service.

One of the original swimmers was Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, a former Army captain and former Fox News co-host, who Brown said promoted the event.

Registration is open. Brown said swimmers must complete a fitness screening before entering the water, either through qualification swims or a test that includes 100 push-ups, 22 pull-ups, a 1-mile flag run, a 2-mile ocean swim and 100 more push-ups, or by proving themselves in an open-water event of more than 3 miles.

Brown said swimmers can use bright orange buoys for flotation and to signal distress. Competitors will wear tracking bracelets, and teams from Donjon Marine Co., the U.S. Coast Guard, the New York Police Department and the New Jersey State Police will monitor the swim.

Beyond the Brotherhood was founded by former Navy SEAL Cmdr. Jimmy May and is led by May, Brown and retired Navy SEAL Drew Forsberg, a former chief warrant officer. Brown said the group provides mentorship, community and purpose for SEALs and other veterans in transition.

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