Tag Archives: Bernard Madoff

Second Circuit Pounds Last Nail In Madoff Plaintiffs' Coffin

By Bill Singer, Contributor

In Molchatsky, et al. v. United States (2nd Circuit, 11-2510 April 10, 2013), Plaintiffs were investors victimized by Bernard Madoff and Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC. Plaintiffs sought to hold the United States liable for the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”). employees’ failure to detect Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme over a 16-year period and for the financial losses sustained. Pointedly, Plaintiffs asserted that as a result of the SEC’s: repeated failure to alert other branch offices of ongoing investigations, properly review complaints and staff  subsequent inquiries, and follow up on disputed facts elicited in interviews, the SEC missed many opportunities to uncover Madoff’s multi-billion-dollar fraud.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

NY appeals court puts stop to Madoff SEC lawsuit

A federal appeals court in New York says investors in Bernard Madoff‘s epic fraud cannot hold the Securities and Exchange Commission responsible for failing to expose his Ponzi scheme.

The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the lawsuit by investors on Wednesday. It upheld a lower-court ruling that found the SEC could not be held responsible.

The appeals court said the agency’s actions and “regrettable inaction” are shielded by rules protecting government employees from lawsuits when they carry out a discretionary function or duty.

The court noted that the SEC missed many opportunities to uncover Madoff’s multibillion-dollar fraud.

Madoff pleaded guilty in 2009 to fraud. He is serving a 150-year prison sentence.

Investors’ lawyers say the SEC wronged investors and the lawsuit was necessary. The government had no comment.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Doing Life For A White-Collar Crime – The Tale of Christian Allmendinger

By Walter Pavlo, Contributor

Long prison terms are usually associated with violent crimes (rape, murder, armed robbery).  However, the Federal Sentencing Guidelines can put a first-time, non-violent offender behind bars for the remainder of their life.  Ponzi schemes such as those run by Bernard Madoff (150 years in prison) and Allen Stanford (110 years in prison) are notable cases where the public hardly batted an eye at those prison terms due to the harm done (billions lost) to so many people (thousands) over a long period of time (decades).  However, the threshold that will get you a life sentence is much lower than a billion dollars. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Should States Compensate Ponzi Scheme Victims? Montana and New Hampshire Think So.

By Jordan Maglich, Contributor

In the nearly five years since Bernard Madoff‘s infamous swindle was revealed to the world, Ponzi schemes have filled news headlines at an alarming and increasing frequency.  While paling in comparison to the estimated $17 billion lost by Madoff’s victims, the losses incurred in each scam and stories of devastation are real, as membership swells in the ‘club’ of those swindled by the gift of gab.  Chances of any meaningful recovery are typically bleak; victims on average recover approximately five percent of their losses through the efforts of court-appointed receivers, bankruptcy trustees, and government regulators.  While restitution is often ordered by the scheme perpetrators, these obligations are typically nothing more than formalities as the scheme collapse nearly always results from a lack of funds.  The experience is a painful and often life-altering lesson for those unfortunate enough to be involved. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Khuzami leaving SEC, led post-crisis enforcement

Robert Khuzami is leaving the Securities and Exchange Commission after leading the agency’s efforts to penalize the nation’s largest banks for actions that triggered the 2008 financial crisis.

The SEC announced Khuzami’s resignation Wednesday. He was named enforcement director in February 2009, just months after the crisis peaked. In his four years at the helm, he spearheaded investigations that accused banks of misleading investors about risky mortgage securities.

His efforts drew historic SEC settlements. Goldman Sachs agreed in July 2010 to pay $550 million to settle civil charges — the largest penalties paid by a bank in a fraud case. Similar deals followed with Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and others.

The cases related to the financial crisis resulted in charges against about 150 companies and individuals, and $2.68 billion in fines and restitution, according to the SEC.

Still, critics have said the penalties were small compared with the banks’ revenues. And they complained that no senior executives were held accountable.

Khuzami is stepping down within a month of former SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro’s departure from the agency.

Elisse Walter, one of the SEC commissioners, was appointed by President Barack Obama to replace Schapiro.

Khuzami, a former criminal prosecutor, was a top legal official at Deutsche Bank when Schapiro brought him to restructure the SEC‘s enforcement division. He streamlined operations and created specialized units to focus on key areas, such as mortgage securities fraud, market manipulation and hedge funds.

At the time, the SEC was smarting from its failure to detect the massive Ponzi scheme run by money manager Bernard Madoff.

During his Justice Department tenure, Khuzami prosecuted the “Blind Sheik” Omar Ahmed Ali Abdel Rahman in what was then the largest terrorism trial in U.S. history following the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center in New York. Ten defendants were convicted of operating a terrorist organization responsible for the bombing, the assassination of Jewish Defense League founder Meir Kahane, and planning bomb attacks on law enforcement and other high-profile targets.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Bernard Madoff's brother gets 10-year sentence

The brother of Bernard Madoff will head to prison in February, serving 10 years for doctoring financial books during his brother’s epic multi-billion-dollar fraud.

The sentence for 67-year-old Peter Madoff was announced Thursday by federal Judge Laura Taylor Swain in Manhattan. She said she finds his claims that he knew nothing about the huge Ponzi scheme “frankly, not believable.” Peter Madoff pleaded guilty in June to charges that he created false documents while he was chief compliance officer at his brother’s firm.

Two investors who lost their life savings also told the judge that they disbelieve Peter Madoff. Madoff will report to prison Feb. 6. His brother is serving a 150-year sentence after revealing the fraud four years ago. Thousands of investors lost about $20 billion.

Source: Fox US News

Bernard Madoff's brother handed 10-year prison sentence

The brother of imprisoned financier Bernard Madoff has been sentenced in New York to 10 years in prison for crimes committed in the shadow of his notorious sibling.

Peter Madoff was sentenced Thursday after victims described their anguish at losing their life savings in the Ponzi scheme. The sentence was announced in a crowded Manhattan courtroom by Judge Laura Taylor Swain six months after Madoff pleaded guilty to conspiracy and falsifying books and records. He agreed then to serve 10 years in prison. It was four years ago this month that his brother revealed his multi-decade fraud that cheated thousands of investors out of their $20 billion investment. Bernard Madoff is serving a 150-year prison term.

Peter Madoff says he did not know of the fraud but committed other crimes.

Source: Fox US News

Bernard Madoff brother to face victims in NY court

The suspense surrounding the sentencing of the brother of Ponzi king Bernard Madoff will largely be absent because a plea agreement makes a 10-year prison term all but certain.

But drama will likely fill the courtroom Thursday in U.S. District Court in Manhattan anyway as 67-year-old Peter Madoff faces some of the heartbroken investors who lost their savings when the unprecedented fraud was revealed four years ago this month.

When he pleaded guilty to conspiracy and falsifying books and records of an investment adviser, the former senior compliance officer at the Madoff private investment business said he was “shocked and devastated” when his brother revealed several days before he surrendered that thousands of accounts supposedly worth $65 billion were worthless. Investigators say Bernard Madoff had distributed most of the $20 billion he took in over several decades to other investors while investing none of it in the markets as he had promised to do.

A court-appointed monitor has so far recovered nearly $9.3 billion that was lost, mostly by clawing back money from investors who received large payouts along the way. Most of the money has not yet been distributed. A small part of the recovery has resulted from the sale of numerous Madoff family assets, including the toys of the wealthy — multi-million dollar homes, fancy cars, yachts and art.

In a pre-sentence brief, attorney John Wing said his client was subject to a “draconian forfeiture order that in one stroke stripped him of all existing assets, his home, his pension, his savings, his personal property, etc. and of all future assets and income should he even have the opportunity to earn any income after serving his prison sentence.” He said Peter Madoff will be left a “jobless pariah” when he gets out of prison.

Yet, one couple who submitted a victim impact statement to federal prosecutors said Peter Madoff did not seem destitute when he was spotted “enjoying a leisurely lunch in an expensive Upper East Side restaurant where many of his victims would like to eat but can’t afford to.”

In the letter filed publically Wednesday with others, Jill and Nancy Miller said they saw him there after he had pleaded guilty in June.

Michael De Vita, an investor who has asked to speak, said in a letter to the court that the judge should set aside the plea agreement and impose the maximum sentence.

“I ask that you show the same degree of compassion for Peter Madoff that he showed for us — none!” he wrote.

Another victim, Gail Oren, said she had to come out of retirement and can only afford rare public outings with friends.

“It is embarrassing,” she said. “My social life is almost non-existent now. As a result, I am often alone and often feel depressed. My life has become a life of loneliness quite often.”

Karl and Wanda Eisenhauer wrote that they were forced to sell their family farm because of their losses.

“It is difficult to describe the heartache. We can only beg for your help,” they said.

Morton J. Chalek recalled standing in line when Pearl Harbor was bombed to enlist in the Air Force. He flew 23 combat missions and later built a successful business before his attorney introduced him to his golf partner, Bernard Madoff.

“I am now 90 years old and bankrupt. I have been waiting hopelessly to recover the money Madoff stole from me,” he said.

Not everyone sounded angry at their loss.

Robert Roman, Peter Madoff‘s brother-in-law, said he and his wife, Joan, had lost their life savings, along with the life savings of their three daughters and their families and yet did not wish prison on Peter Madoff.

“Our family is supposed to hate him. But — we do not. Why? Because prison is where Charles Manson belongs. That is a solution to his situation. Peter in prison is an answer only to those who seek revenge. It is not a solution,” he wrote.

Roman said he met the brothers in February 1954 and witnessed firsthand the “domination and back-yard bullying” that Peter Madoff endured at the hands of his brother.

He called Peter Madoff a victim and said the tens of millions of dollars in riches given to Peter by his brother likely corrupted him to give in to his brother’s demands.

Bernard Madoff had control of the greatest weapon of mass destruction ever created. It was his checkbook. To be seduced by that weapon is the ultimate temptation,” Roman wrote.

Source: Fox US News

NY defense: Peter Madoff will be 'jobless pariah'

A defense lawyer says the brother of imprisoned Wall Street financier Bernard Madoff (MAY’-dawf) will be left penniless and spend his remaining days as a “jobless pariah” in or out of prison.

Attorney John Wing made the observations in a sentencing memorandum made public Monday, three days before Peter Madoff is to be sentenced in New York for his role in a fraud that cheated thousands of people out of $20 billion.

The lawyer says the 67-year-old Peter Madoff was shocked to learn two days before his older brother’s 2008 arrest the family’s investment business was a sham even though he was the company’s chief compliance officer.

The lawyer says Peter Madoff had always done as his brother commanded since childhood.

Bernard Madoff pleaded guilty to fraud charges and is in prison in Butner, N.C.

Source: Fox US News

Madoff's brother deserves decade in jail, New York prosecutors say

New York prosecutors say Wall Street swindler Bernard Madoff‘s brother deserves to spend 10 years in prison for his role in Madoff’s crimes.

Prosecutors say in a sentencing brief filed late Thursday the decade Peter Madoff agreed to serve when he pleaded guilty earlier this year is appropriate. The sentencing is scheduled to take place in Manhattan federal court Dec. 20.

The 66-year-old Peter Madoff claimed at his June plea to conspiracy and falsifying records charges he was a victim of his brother. The government says at least one victim among thousands harmed by the $20 billion fraud wants to speak at the sentencing.

Bernard Madoff pleaded guilty to fraud charges and is serving 150 years in prison in Butner, North Carolina Lawyers for Peter Madoff haven’t commented.