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atprm
12-11-2008, 06:31 PM
Madoff Charged in $50 Billion Fraud at Advisory Firm

By David Glovin and David Scheer

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Bernard Madoff, founder and president of a New York firm that invested funds for wealthy individuals, hedge funds and other institutions, was charged with operating what he told employees was a long-running $50 billion Ponzi scheme in what may be one of the largest frauds in history.

Madoff, 70, head of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, was arrested today at 8:30 a.m. by the FBI and appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Douglas Eaton in Manhattan federal court. Charged in a criminal complaint with a single count of securities fraud, he was released on $10 million bond guaranteed by his wife and secured by his apartment. Madoff, wearing a white-striped shirt, dark-colored pants and no tie, looked down as he left the courtroom with his wife, declining to comment.

“It’s all just one big lie,” Madoff told his employees on Dec. 10, according to the government. The firm, Madoff allegedly said to them, is “basically, a giant Ponzi scheme.”

Madoff’s New York-based firm was the 23rd largest market maker on Nasdaq in October, handling a daily average of about 50 million shares a day, exchange data show. It specialized in handling orders from online brokers in some of the largest U.S. companies, including General Electric Co. and Citigroup Inc.

‘One of The Pioneers’

“He’s one of the pioneers of modern Wall Street,” said James Angel, an associate business professor at Georgetown University in Washington. Madoff’s firm was among the first to automate market-making, in which a dealer continually buys and sells stock. The company was among the largest to offer “payment for order flow,” or paying to handle customer orders.

“The exchanges didn’t like the practice and questioned whether customers got the best price,” Angel said.

Madoff was also sued today by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

“Bernard Madoff is a longstanding leader in the financial services industry,” said defense lawyer Dan Horwitz. “We will fight to get through this unfortunate set of events. He’s a person of integrity.”

Fix Asset Management in New York, which had at least $400 million with Madoff, said it was checking with its lawyers regarding its holdings.

“We are very shocked,” John Fix, the son of founder Charles Fix, said by telephone from Greece. “We put in redemptions in the past few months and got our money back no problem. We are just so surprised about all this.”

‘Accelerating Their Redemptions’

Thomas Ajamie, a securities lawyer in Houston who won a $429 million arbitration award against Paine Webber Group in 2001, speculated that Madoff “couldn’t keep the Ponzi scheme going because investors were accelerating their redemptions.”

New York-based Fairfield Greenwich Group runs the $7.3 billion Fairfield Sentry Ltd., a fund that invested in Madoff. Andrew Ludwig, a spokesman for Fairfield, declined to immediately comment.

The SEC in its complaint, also filed in Manhattan federal court, accused Madoff of a “multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme that he perpetrated on advisory clients of his firm.”

The agency said it’s seeking emergency relief for investors, including an asset freeze and the appointment of a receiver for the firm. Ira Sorkin, another defense lawyer for Madoff, couldn’t be immediately reached for comment.

Madoff ran his investment advisory business from a separate floor of his firm’s office, keeping financial statements “under lock and key,” prosecutors said. Early in December, he told one employee that clients wanted to redeem about $7 billion and that he was struggling to free up the funds, the government said. After he told another staff member Dec. 9 that he wanted to pay annual bonuses before the year’s end, two months early, a pair of senior employees asked to speak with him, prosecutors said.

‘Great Deal of Stress’

They had noticed he had been suffering from a “great deal of stress” and wanted to know what was happening, the U.S. said. When one of them challenged his explanations, Madoff invited them to his Manhattan apartment, saying he “wasn’t sure he would be able to hold it together” if they continued talking at the office, the government said.

While meeting the pair at his home yesterday, Madoff conceded that he was “finished,” that his advisory business is “all just one big lie” and “basically, a giant Ponzi scheme,” the government said. The business had been insolvent for years with losses of about $50 billion, he told the employees, according to the criminal and SEC complaints.

Madoff said he had about $200 million to $300 million left and planned to distribute money to select employees, family and friends before surrendering to authorities in about a week, the government said.

Confessed to FBI

Madoff allegedly confessed to FBI agent Theodore Cacioppi on Dec. 11, saying there was “no innocent explanation,” the SEC said in its complaint. Madoff said it was his fault and he had “paid investors with money that wasn’t there.” He also said he was “insolvent” and he expected to go to jail, it said.

The Madoff firm had about $17.1 billion in assets under management as of Nov. 17, according to NASD records. At least 50 percent of its clients were hedge funds, and others included banks and wealthy individuals, according to the records.

Madoff started his firm in 1960 with $5,000 of savings and took advantage of securities-law changes in the 1970s designed to spur competition in U.S. stock markets, according to a profile posted on the Web site Finance Tech.

75 Percent Owner

Madoff, who owned more than 75 percent of his firm, and his brother Peter are the only two individuals listed on regulatory records as “direct owners and executive officers.”

Peter Madoff was a board member of the St. Louis brokerage firm A.G. Edwards Inc. from 2001 through last year, when it was sold to Wachovia Corp.

Bernard Madoff served as vice chairman of the National Association of Securities Dealers, a member of its board of governors, and chairman of its New York region, according to the SEC Web site. He was also a member of Nasdaq Stock Market’s board of governors and its executive committee and served as chairman of its trading committee.

He was chief of the Securities Industry Association’s trading committee in the 1990s and earlier this decade, where he represented brokerage firms in discussions with regulators about new stock-market rules as electronic-trading systems and networks gained prominence.

He was an early advocate for electronic trading, participating in roundtable discussions at the SEC as regulators weighed trading stocks in penny increments. His firm was among the first to make markets in New York Stock Exchange listed stocks outside of the Big Board, relying instead on Nasdaq.

‘Third Market Makers’

“These guys were one of the original, if not the original, third market makers,” said Joseph Saluzzi, the co-head of equity trading at Themis Trading LLC in Chatham, New Jersey. “They had a great business and they were good with their clients. They were around for a long time. He’s a well-respected guy in the industry.”

At 6:30 p.m., security guards at the front desk of the lipstick-shaped building on Third Avenue in midtown Manhattan housing Madoff’s office were turning people away. Ganesh Sewpershad, a messenger with Speeddox, said he had been trying to deliver mail for 20 minutes and was told to return tomorrow.

Madoff’s Web site advertises the “high ethical standards” of his firm.

“In an era of faceless organizations owned by other equally faceless organizations, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC harks back to an earlier era in the financial world: The owner’s name is on the door,” according to the Web site. “Clients know that Bernard Madoff has a personal interest in maintaining the unblemished record of value, fair-dealing, and high ethical standards that has always been the firm’s hallmark.”

The case is U.S. v. Madoff, 08-MAG-02735, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York (Manhattan)

To contact the reporter on this story: David Glovin in U.S. District Court in New York at [email protected] and; David Scheer in New York at [email protected].
Last Updated: December 11, 2008 19:59 EST

Jolie Rouge
12-23-2008, 11:10 PM
Investor who lost $1.4B to Madoff kills himself
Adam Goldman, Associated Press Writer
52 mins ago

NEW YORK – He was a distinguished investor who traced his lineage to the French aristocracy, hobnobbed with members of European high society and sailed around the world on fancy yachts.

But after losing more than $1 billion of his clients' money to Bernard Madoff, Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet had enough. He locked the door of his Madison Avenue office and apparently swallowed sleeping pills and slashed his wrists with a box cutter, police said.

A security guard found his body Tuesday morning, next to a garbage can placed to catch the blood.

The bloody scene marked a grisly turn in the Madoff scandal in which money managers and investors were ensnared in an alleged $50 billion Ponzi scheme. De la Villehuchet is believed to have lost about $1.4 billion to Madoff.

No suicide note was found, said NYPD spokesman Paul Browne.

De la Villehuchet, 65, was an esteemed financier who tapped his upper-crust European connections to attract clients. It was not immediately clear how he knew Madoff or who his clients were.

He grew increasingly subdued after the Madoff scandal broke, drawing suspicion among janitors at his office Monday night when he demanded that they be out of there by 7 p.m. Less than 13 hours later, his body was found.

His death came as swindled investors began looking for ways to recoup their losses. Funds that lost big to Madoff are also facing investor lawsuits and backlash for failing to properly vet Madoff and overlooking red flags that could have steered them away. It's not immediately known what kind of scrutiny de la Villehuchet was facing over his losses.

De la Villehuchet (pronounced veel-ou-SHAY) comes from rich French lineage, with the Magon part of his name referring to one of France's most powerful families. The Magon name is even listed on the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, a monument commissioned by Napoleon in 1806.

"He's irreproachable," said Bill Rapavy, who was Access International's chief operating officer before founding his own firm in 2007.

De la Villehuchet's firm enlisted intermediaries with links to wealthy Europeans to garner investors. Among them was Philippe Junot, a French businessman and friend who is the former husband of Princess Caroline of Monaco, and Prince Michel of Yugoslavia.

De la Villehuchet, the former chairman and chief executive of Credit Lyonnais Securities USA, was also known as a keen sailor who regularly participated in regattas and was a member of the New York Yacht Club.

He lived in an affluent suburb in Westchester County with his wife, Claudine. They have no children. There was no answer Tuesday at the family's two-story house. Phone calls to the home and de la Villehuchet's office went unanswered.

Guy Gurney, a British photographer living in Connecticut, was friends with de la Villehuchet. The two often sailed together and competed in a regatta in France in November.

"He was a very honorable man," Gurney said. "He was extraordinarily generous. He was an aristocrat but not a snob. He was a real person. When he was sailing, he was one of the boys."

The two were supposed to have dinner last Friday but Gurney called the day before to cancel because of the weather. But during the call, de la Villehuchet revealed he had been ensnared in Madoff scandal. "He sounded very subdued," Gurney said.

Gurney said de la Villehuchet was happily married to his wife. "I can't imagine what it's like for her now," he said.

___

Associated Press Writers Tom Hays, Rachel Beck and Joe Bel Bruno and the AP News Research Center in New York; Jim Fitzgerald in New Rochelle, N.Y.; and Joelle Diderich in Paris contributed to this report.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081224/ap_on_bi_ge/madoff_investor_suicide;_ylt=AooyCrBHwlIriuF8nJftq G.s0NUE

atprm
12-24-2008, 07:56 AM
suicide is not a very honorable thing to do .


"He was a very honorable man," Gurney said.

dv8grl
12-24-2008, 08:29 AM
Investor who lost $1.4B to Madoff kills himself



Madoff should be charged with murder as well.

R.I.P. Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet

YankeeMary
12-24-2008, 08:45 AM
Madoff should be charged with murder as well.

R.I.P. Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet

Why? He was also involved right? He decided to kill himself instead of face the consequences.

boopster
12-26-2008, 04:13 PM
Why? He was also involved right? He decided to kill himself instead of face the consequences.
He was an investor who invested for many people including the nobility of Europe. He did not have his hands in the pot.

YankeeMary
12-26-2008, 04:55 PM
He was an investor who invested for many people including the nobility of Europe. He did not have his hands in the pot.

Oh ok. Thanks, I guess I just mis-read. I couldn't figure it out...lol. Again thanks.

gmyers
12-26-2008, 05:22 PM
suicide is not a very honorable thing to do .

It's a desperate thing to do. I don't think someones a coward that commits suicide. I think they're just very depressed and lost. I'm not saying you said he was a coward but I've heard others say it and I disagree.

LuvBigRip
02-11-2009, 11:05 AM
BOSTON (Reuters) – The wife of accused Wall Street swindler Bernard Madoff pulled $15 million out of a brokerage account only days before her husband was arrested, Massachusetts' top securities regulator said on Wednesday.

Secretary of State William Galvin said Ruth Madoff withdrew $5.5 million on November 25 and $10 million on December 10 according to reports produced by Cohmad Securities, a firm co-owned by her husband.

Madoff is accused of masterminding a $50 billion Ponzi scheme. He was arrested and charged with securities fraud on December 11. In a Ponzi scheme, early investors are paid with money from later investors.

For years, Cohmad Securities, partly owned by Madoff, received monthly payments from the financier for "professional services", "brokerage services" and "fees for account supervision," Galvin's office said.

The payments totaled $67 million and made up 84 percent of Cohmad's total income over the last eight years, the documents show.

Many Massachusetts residents who lost millions of dollars to Madoff told Galvin's office that they were introduced to the financier by Cohmad representatives, including Robert Jaffe. Jaffe had been a long-time friend of Madoff and relied on his deep roots in Boston to make the introductions. Recently Jaffe said he too was a victim of Madoff's fraud.

Cohmad, which is registered to act as broker in Massachusetts, also paid money to Sonja Kohn, who founded Austria's Bank Medici and had close ties to Madoff, the documents show.

Galvin is trying to suspend Cohmad's state license so that it can no longer act as a broker in Massachusetts.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090211/bs_nm/us_madoff_wife

dv8grl
02-11-2009, 07:54 PM
Lock her up as well.
Prison is too good for these crooks.

Jolie Rouge
02-18-2009, 08:58 AM
Madoff and Company Spent Nearly $1 Million on Washington InfluenceLindsay Renick Mayer on December 15, 2008

The man behind a $50 billion Ponzi scheme that has roiled Wall Street and shaken up the nonprofit world was also a long-time contributor to Democrats, the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics has found. Bernard Madoff was arrested last Thursday and charged with operating a fraudulent money-management business with which he advised investors, hedge funds and institutions, including charitable foundations. Madoff made a fortune, and he played politics with some of that money. In total, he and his wife, Ruth, have given $238,200 to federal candidates, parties and committees since 1991, with Democrats getting 88 percent of that. Overall, Madoff and other individuals at his company, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, gave $372,100 in campaign contributions since 1991, with 89 percent to Democrats. The firm spent $590,000 on lobbying in the last 11 years, all but $10,000 of it with the lobbying firm of Lent, Scrivner & Roth. A search for funds with "Madoff" in their title in lawmakers' personal investments did not find any members of Congress with their own funds invested with him.

The following party committees, PACs and current members of Congress have received contributions from Madoff and his wife since the 1992 election cycle:

http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2008/12/madoff-and-company-spent-nearl.html

http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2008/12/madoff-and-company-spent-nearl.html

LuvBigRip
02-18-2009, 09:06 AM
The following party committees, PACs and current members of Congress have received contributions from Madoff and his wife since the 1992 election cycle:

http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2008/12/madoff-and-company-spent-nearl.html

http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2008/12/madoff-and-company-spent-nearl.html

Democratic Senatorial Campaign Cmte
D
$102,000

Securities Industry Assn

$31,000

Wyden, Ron
D
$13,000

Schumer, Charles E
D
$12,000

Markey, Edward J
D
$10,000

Securities Industry & Financial Mkt Assn

$10,000

Lautenberg, Frank R
D
$8,600

Merkley, Jeff
D
$2,300

Clinton, Hillary
D
$2,000

Rangel, Charles B
D
$2,000

Towns, Edolphus
D
$2,000

Dodd, Christopher J
D
$1,500

Ackerman, Gary
D
$1,200

Dingell, John D
D
$1,000

Obey, David R
D
$1,000

Matheson, Jim
D
$250

National Abortion Rights Action League

$250

LuvBigRip
03-10-2009, 01:15 PM
NEW YORK - Bernard Madoff’s lawyer has told a judge his client will plead guilty later this week to 11 counts including money laundering, perjury and securities, mail and wire fraud.

Prosecutors said the disgraced money manager will face up to 150 years in prison on the charges.

The details of the criminal case emerged at a hearing Tuesday to resolve several potential conflicts of interest between Madoff and his lawyer, Ira Sorkin.

Sorkin and his family invested more than $900,000 with Madoff. After questioning Madoff, the judge ruled that Sorkin may continue representing Madoff.

Asked by the judge if Madoff would plead guilty Thursday, Sorkin said: “I think that’s a fair expectation.”

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29612242/

LuvBigRip
03-12-2009, 08:53 AM
NEW YORK – Bernard Madoff pleaded guilty Thursday to an epic fraud that robbed investors worldwide of billions of dollars, avoiding eye contact with swindled investors before he was led out of court with his hands cuffed behind his back.

U.S. District Judge Denny Chin denied bail for Madoff, 70, and ordered him to jail, noting that he had the means to flee and an incentive to do so because of his age.

Madoff spoke steadily in court as he addressed the judge before his guilty plea was accepted.

"I am actually grateful for this opportunity to publicly comment about my crimes, for which I am deeply sorry and ashamed," he said.

"As the years went by, I realized my risk, and this day would inevitably come. I cannot adequately express how sorry I am for my crimes."

Madoff did not look at any of the three investors who spoke at the hearing, even when one of them turned in his direction and tried to address him.

After arguments began as to whether Madoff should remain free on bail, his lawyer Ira Sorkin described the bail conditions and how Madoff had, "at his wife's own expense," paid for private security at his $7 million penthouse.

Loud laughter erupted among some of the more than 100 spectators crammed into the large courtroom on the 24th floor of the federal courthouse in lower Manhattan. The judge warned the spectators to remain silent.

The fraud turned a revered money man into an overnight global disgrace whose name became synonymous with the current economic meltdown.

Madoff described his crimes after he entered a guilty plea to all 11 counts he was charged with, including fraud, perjury, theft from an employee benefit plan, and two counts of international money laundering.

Prosecutors say the disgraced financier, who has spent three months under house arrest in his $7 million in Manhattan penthouse, could face a maximum sentence of 150 years in prison at sentencing.

Madoff explained his scheme by telling the judge that he believed the fraud would be short-term and that he could extricate himself.

The plea came three months after the FBI claimed Madoff admitted to his sons that his once-revered investment fund was all a big lie — a Ponzi scheme that was in the billions of dollars. Since his arrest in December, the scandal has turned the 70-year-old former Nasdaq chairman into a pariah who has worn a bulletproof vest to court.

The scheme evaporated life fortunes, wiped out charities and apparently pushed at least two investors to commit suicide. Victims big and small were swindled by Madoff, from elderly Florida retirees to actors Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick and Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090312/ap_on_bi_ge/madoff_scandal

SurferGirl
03-12-2009, 10:04 AM
After Madoff and Stanford and a few others, I don't think I'll ever invest in the stock market ever again. Just think of all the copy cats that will be out there now.

Jolie Rouge
03-13-2009, 09:05 PM
Madoffs were worth more than $823M, documents show
AP – 2 hrs 10 mins ago

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090314/ap_on_bi_ge/madoff_scandal_assets;_ylt=AqvLOdXwmTJYTpJX_TV9ea2 s0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTJmdjVxZ2NlBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMDkwMzE 0L21hZG9mZl9zY2FuZGFsX2Fzc2V0cwRwb3MDMgRzZWMDeW5fd G9wX3N0b3J5BHNsawNtYWRvZmZzd2VyZXc-

NEW YORK – Bernard Madoff and his wife had $823 million in assets at the end of last year, including $22 million in properties stretching from New York to the French Riviera, a $7 million yacht and a $2.2 million boat named "Bull," according to a document his lawyers filed Friday.

LuvBigRip
03-16-2009, 08:00 AM
NEW YORK — Federal prosecutors have notified a New York court that they also want the assets of Bernard Madoff's wife.

In a court filing, the government said it will seek the $7 million Manhattan penthouse as well as another $62 million that Ruth Madoff had sought to keep.

The 70-year-old Bernard Madoff pleaded guilty last week to securities fraud and perjury, among other charges.

Madoff's lawyers had indicated earlier that they planned to claim Ruth Madoff was entitled to keep as much as $69 million in assets.

They said the assets were not part of Madoff's fraud and that they were in her name.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,509364,00.html

LuvBigRip
03-18-2009, 10:40 AM
NEW YORK — Bernard Madoff's longtime accountant was arrested on fraud charges Wednesday and accused of helping the disgraced money manager cheat thousands of investors out of billions of dollars in the past two decades.

The charges against David Friehling, 49, come as federal authorities turn their attention to people they believe helped Madoff fool 4,800 investors into thinking that their investments were growing comfortably each year. Friehling is the first person to be arrested since the Madoff scandal broke three months ago.

Friehling ran an accounting office in a nondescript suburban building north of New York City, and quickly drew scrutiny over how he could have not detected the fraud. Experts in accounting also said it would be preposterous for such a tiny firm to properly audit an operation the size of Madoff's.

Prosecutors said Friehling essentially rubber-stamped Madoff's books for 17 years, serving as Madoff's auditor from 1991 through 2008 while he worked as the sole practitioner at Friehling & Horowitz. He was paid a tidy sum by Madoff: Prosecutors said he made between $12,000 and $14,500 a month from 2004 to 2007. That amounts to $144,000 to $174,000 a year.

Authorities said that if Friehling had done his job, Madoff's financial statements would have shown his company owed tens of billions of dollars to his customers and was insolvent.

"He did little or no testing, no verification of the `facts' he certified," said Joseph M. Demarest, head of New York's FBI office. "His job was not merely to rubber-stamp statements he didn't verify."

Friehling faces up to 105 years in prison if he is convicted. He is charged with securities fraud, aiding and abetting investment adviser fraud and four counts of filing false audit reports with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Friehling's lawyer, Andrew Lankler, said in an email that he and his client had "no comment at this time." The accountant had a court appearance Wednesday afternoon in federal court.

Acting U.S. Attorney Lev L. Dassin said in a release that Friehling is not charged with knowing about Madoff's Ponzi scheme. However, Dassin said: "Mr. Friehling's deception helped foster the illusion that Mr. Madoff legitimately invested his clients' money."

Investigators also said that Friehling and his family had sizable investments with Madoff, accumulating a balance of more than $14 million by late last year and withdrawing more than $5.5 million since 2000. Prosecutors said it's a conflict of interest for an auditor to have such a large investment.

The SEC said Friehling also took steps to hide his investment with Madoff, including replacing his own name on his Madoff account with his wife's name and later naming the account the "Friehling Investment Fund" to conceal the conflict of interest.

The SEC said Friehling did not meaningfully audit Madoff's business or confirm that securities purportedly held by Madoff's company on behalf of its customers even existed.

The SEC said Friehling instead pretended to conduct minimal audit procedures of certain accounts to make it seem he was conducting an audit and then failed to document his purported findings and conclusions as he was required to do.

The SEC also accused Friehling of lying to the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants for years, denying he conducted any audit work, because he was afraid that his work for Madoff would be subject to peer review.

The fraud charges against Friehling come just days after the founder of his auditing firm died of cancer. Jerome Horowitz died last week at the age of 80, a family friend said.

Horowitz handled Madoff's books for many years before turning the business over to Friehling, who is his son-in-law.

Horowitz's lawyer, Latour "L.T." Lafferty, declined to immediately comment on his death or Friehling's arrest Wednesday, but had previously described the two accountants as victims of the scam who were unaware that fraud was taking place.

The strain of the Madoff scandal on Friehling began to show in recent months as he put his luxury home in Rockland County on the market.

A listing posted on the Web site of Prudential Rand Real Estate said the family is seeking $995,000 for the five-bedroom Colonial. The home was built in 1990 and has a swimming pool and 4,437 square feet of space.

Madoff, 70, pleaded guilty to securities fraud, perjury and other charges on Thursday and was immediately sent to prison to await a June sentencing, when he faces up to 150 years in prison.

During his plea, Madoff said he began a Ponzi scheme in the 1990s in response to the pain of a recession, thinking it would be a short-lived solution. He said he never recovered, though, and knew prison awaited him.

Investigators have said they believe investors may have originally put $17 billion or less into accounts with Madoff but that Madoff falsely told them in their financial statements that it had grown to as much as $65 billion.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,509663,00.html

LuvBigRip
03-24-2009, 09:27 AM
NEW YORK - More than $1 billion in assets from Bernard Madoff’s businesses have been found, a lawyer for the trustee trying to recover money for jilted investors said Monday.

The lawyer, David Sheehan, said $75 million in an account in Gibraltar raises the amount of assets located past the $1 billion mark.

Sheehan spoke after a hearing in which government lawyers tried to block court-appointed trustee Irving Picard from gaining power of attorney over Madoff’s international operation.

Sheehan argued that power of attorney over Madoff’s accounts is an important tool, especially since actions may need to be taken quickly in foreign countries where things can happen to assets without warning.

For instance, Sheehan said, the trustee has been told that French authorities were planning to seize Madoff’s chateau in Cap d’ Antibe, France. The property was estimated by Madoff to be worth $1 million at the end of 2008, with $900,000 in furnishings and fine art inside it.

Sheehan said he understood that French authorities wanted to seize the property to benefit investors in France who lost money to Madoff.

“Those things happen almost daily,” he told U.S. District Judge Louis L. Stanton, saying the trustee needs a strong hand in dealing overseas.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Barbara Ann Ward said U.S. authorities already have relationships in foreign countries and can act quickly to protect investor assets.

She said any assets in Madoff’s international business account should be held in escrow, although prosecutors could agree to allow some movement if action is necessary to protect them.

The judge repeatedly asked Ward if she thought the trustee could not be trusted or was doing something wrong.

“It has nothing to do with mistrusting the trustee or anyone else,” she said. “The trustee has not explained why the trustee needs this power.”

Ward said U.S. prosecutors were working with law enforcement authorities in other countries, including the Serious Organised Crime Agency in London.

She said there were “criminal implications” involved in Madoff’s international securities business. The judge did not immediately decide the issue.

Madoff, 70, was sent to prison nearly two weeks ago after he pleaded guilty to charges that he ripped off thousands of investors for billions of dollars. He was arrested in December after confessing to his sons that his private investment business was a giant fraud.

The government has said he informed investors at the end of November that they had nearly $65 billion in their accounts. Investigators say the figure was most likely based on what accounts originally valued at less than $20 billion would be worth if he had delivered the steady profits he promised.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29854351

hesnothere
06-29-2009, 08:48 AM
Madoff Gets 150 Years

Well, the question has been answered. Bernie Madoff has been sentenced to 150 years in prison. The matter now shifts to the Bureau of Prisons, which will make the decision on where Madoff will be sent. Possibilities might include the low- or medium-security prisons near New York City like Fort Dix, N.J., Otisville, N.Y., or Allenwood, Pa.

http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2009/06/29/breaking-madoff-gets-150-years/

pepperpot
06-29-2009, 08:57 AM
Good........:agree

hesnothere
06-29-2009, 09:05 AM
Good........:agree

You got that right!

SurferGirl
06-29-2009, 09:44 AM
Now hopefully he doesn't end up in one of those country club prisons.

candygirl
06-29-2009, 09:47 AM
Madoff sentenced to 150 years
Federal judge gives maximum sentence to Ponzi mastermind following his apology and victims' request for life sentence.

Last Updated: June 29, 2009: 12:03 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- A federal judge sentenced Bernard Madoff, the convicted mastermind of the largest and most sweeping Ponzi scheme ever, to the maximum sentence of 150 years in federal court Monday.

Judge Denny Chin of U.S. District Court in New York announced the sentence just moments after Madoff apologized to his victims.

Chin said the maximum sentence was important for deterrence, and also for the victims.

Victims erupted into applause after the judge announced the sentence. Many of the victims hugged and some of them broke down in tears.

Shortly before he received his sentence, Madoff offered an apology.

"I live in a tormented state for all the pain and suffering I created," Madoff said. "I left a legacy of shame. It is something I will live with for the rest of my life."

Turning to face some of his victims, he addressed them directly: "Saying I'm sorry is not enough. I turn to face you. I know it will not help. I'm sorry."

Madoff said he was not asking for forgiveness and not offering any excuses for his behavior.

"How can you excuse betraying thousands of investors?" he asked. "How can you excuse deceiving hundreds of employees? How can you excuse lying to and deceiving your wife who still stands by you?"

Victims had urged the judge to hand down the maximum life sentence against Bernard Madoff, the mastermind of the largest and most sweeping Ponzi scheme ever.

"We implore you to give the maximum sentence at a maximum prison for this deplorable low life," said one of the victims in court before Madoff spoke. "This is a violent crime without a tangible weapon."

Many of Madoff's investors were wiped out financially by the scam and sent letters to Judge Chin requesting he spend the rest of his life behind bars. Ten of the letter-writers spoke in court on Monday.

Speaking on behalf of his wife and looking at Madoff, one victim said, "I have a marriage made in heaven. You have [a] marriage made in hell, and that's where you'll return. May God spare you no mercy."

The 150-year sentence is the maximum that federal prosecutors in New York requested, based on the number of Madoff's victims, the amount of money he stole and the extent of the damage he caused. Judge Chin said that the Federal Department of Probation had recommended a 50-year sentence.

Madoff, who was stripped of his property in a legal action Friday, confessed on March 12 to running a massive Ponzi scheme. He pleaded guilty to 11 criminal counts, including fraud, money laundering, perjury, false filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and other crimes.

Lawyer Ira Lee Sorkin, who represents Madoff, asked for a 12-year sentence. In a letter to the judge, Sorkin explained that his 71-year-old client "has an approximate life expectancy of 13 years" and isn't likely to outlive the requested sentence by more than a year.

Madoff orchestrated the scam by masquerading his investment firm as a legitimate business. But the business became a front for a Ponzi scheme, in which the scammer uses fresh money from unsuspecting investors to make payments to more mature investors, creating the false appearance of legitimate returns.

Madoff sent statements to victims claiming that their investments had grown several times over, but in actuality he had stolen, not invested, their money. Investigators believe that he had been running his scam since at least the 1980s until he finally ran out of money in December 2008.

In a $170 billion legal judgment against Madoff, the government announced Friday it had seized all of his property in a deal that also forces his wife to give up homes and property worth millions. The value of all the assets will eventually be used to compensate -- or partially compensate -- victims, based on how much they invested in Madoff's firm.

The Securities Investor Protection Corporation, an organization that shields investors in brokerage firms, will also pay up to $500,000 for any eligible claimant who lost money to Madoff, based on how much they put in.

Thus far, federal investigators have identified 1,341 investors in Madoff's firm, who have losses exceeding $13 billion. They're still tallying the damage. Victims have until July 2 to file a claim with U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York.

Since March, Madoff has been incarcerated in the Metropolitan Correctional Center in lower Manhattan, a holding facility for convicts awaiting sentencing. He will probably be transferred to a medium-security federal prison, according to prison consultants.

Alan Ellis, attorney and author of the "Federal Prison Guidebook," believes that Madoff will probably get sent to Federal Correctional Institute Otisville or FCI Ray Brook, both in upstate New York, FCI Fairton in New Jersey or FCI McKean in Pennsylvania.

--CNN's Michael Chernoff, Sara Lane, David Brandt, and Brian Vitagliano contributed to this report.

First Published: June 29, 2009: 9:37 AM ET

tsquared
06-29-2009, 10:33 AM
He got 150 years...........so what............ sad thing is he has lived his life lavishly off of other people's money and will probably only live 10 to 20 more years with meals, warmth, a roof over his head. However the people he screwed out of their money will live several years working, scraping, rebuilding for that life he took from them. Sometimes the justice system seems a tad backwards to me.

Jolie Rouge
06-21-2010, 03:21 PM
Inmate claims Madoff stowed $9 billion out of feds' reach[/i]
1 hr 40 mins ago [/i]

Did Bernie Madoff swindle the feds as well as his high-flying fund investors?

That's what Dan Mangan suggests in the New York Post today. According to a prison informant serving time with Madoff in the federal prison in Butner, N.C., the Ponzi schemer claims to have sequestered some $9 billion in ill-gotten investment gains prior to his arrest.

The unnamed inmate told the Post that Madoff has bragged openly that he funneled the money to three friends — and that his former partner, Frank DiPascali, knows the identities of the three secret billionaires. According to the source, Madoff mentioned that he suspects DiPascali — who pleaded guilty last year to helping Madoff fleece his investors — is using that information to cut a deal with the feds.

But could Madoff really manage to hide such a large sum of money from the army of auditors and investigators who've pored over his records? Or is he just telling fanciful tales to increase his profile in the joint? At least one financial journalist who followed the Madoff saga thinks it's unlikely that Bernie's lying.

"I think it's entirely plausible," John Carney, a senior editor at CNBC.com, told Yahoo! News. "Remember, he all but turned himself in. That means he had plenty of time to stash away assets overseas. I'd be shocked if he did not do this."

Mangan's prison informant also told him that Madoff became acutely depressed, and consumed with worries that his wife, Ruth, might take up with another man after a book revealed his long string of extramarital affairs. And to treat his condition, the inmate claims, Madoff sought therapy from the prison psychiatrist.

What's more, the informant claims that the injuries Madoff suffered in prison last year — commonly attributed at the time to a prison beatdown — actually arose from Madoff's own adverse reactions to a prescribed antidepressant.

"He looked really bad, really bad," the inmate told Mangan. "The buzz was he got beat up by a bunch of [Washington,] D.C. guys that were trying to extort money. He didn't get beat up."

Another inmate serving time with Madoff told New York Magazine's Steve Fishman the same thing last month, insisting that anyone who physically harmed Madoff — something of a "made" celebrity among the inmate population for the stunning scope of his crimes — in prison would face violent retribution. "If Bernie had gotten beat up," the convict told Fishman, "I would have done something about it."

But the inmate Mangan spoke to contradicted an inmate quoted in Fishman's piece who alleged that Madoff was unrepentant for his crimes, reportedly blurting out "f**k my victims" when asked if he felt remorseful.

"He knows he did wrong," Mangan's informant told the Post. "He also feels a lot of pain for what he did to people."

— Brett Michael Dykes is a national affairs writer for Yahoo! News.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/20100621/ts_ynews/ynews_ts2740/print;_ylt=ArNOWj3wojUjLPtWWmBvIYIEq594;_ylu=X3oDM TBvajZzaTFyBHBvcwMxNQRzZWMDdG9wBHNsawNwcmludA--