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Bernie Madoff: The Greatest Con in History - YouTube
Channel: Biographics
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It was the financial scandal of the century.
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One of the most respected figures on Wall
Street, a man who was considered to have the
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investment Midas touch, had not actually invested
a dime in the past fifteen years.
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Instead he’d been running the largest Ponzi
scheme in history.
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In today’s Biographics, we take a look at
the stunning rise and cataclysmic fall of
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Bernie Madoff.
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Early Years
Bernard Lawrence Madoff was born on April
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29th, 1938 in Queens New York.
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His parents, Ralph and Sylvia, were the children
of East European Jews who had fled to America
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in the early 1900s to escape fervent anti-Semitism.
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The couple were married in 1932 at the height
of the great depression.
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Ralph held a succession of jobs including
as an assistant manager at a wholesale jewelry
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store.
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The family managed to move from the Bronx
to the more upmarket Belmont Avenue in Brooklyn
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by the time that their second child Bernard
was born.
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Older sister, Sondra, had been born in 1934,
with brother Peter following in 1945.
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In 1946 the Madoffs purchased their first
home, a modest two-story red-brick with a
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small garage located in Laurelton, New York.
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This was a pretty, middle class suburban neighborhood
with tree lined streets.
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The Madoffs were remembered by neighbors as
a close, loving family and Bernie as a normal
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kid who enjoyed playing stickball and riding
his bicycle around the neighborhood.
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Bernie began his schooling in 1946.
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He seemed to be a fairly popular student but
not a standout in any respects.
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Academically he was average at best.
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On the sports field he was even worse.
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Nor did he have any success with the girls.
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He had a crush on a girl named Elsa Lipson
and made some muddled efforts to win her over.
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However, she chose his best friend, which
cut Bernie deeply.
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Bernie did end up with a girlfriend during
his middle school years, a girl by the name
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of Marcia Mendhelson.
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However, he was constantly falling short of
his peers academically, a fact which negatively
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affected his self-confidence.
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Marcia later recalled . . .
I remember he was always disappointed getting
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his grades because he didn’t make the honor
society.
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He wanted to be in the honor classes.
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We all knew.
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He was always the struggler.
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Marcia decided to end the relationship because
she didn’t think that Bernie was smart enough
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for her.
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His high school years were happier for Bernie
than his primary school experiences.
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He joined the swim team, finally discovering
something physical that he was good at.
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He took a couple of part time jobs.
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One was as a life-guard at the beach during
the summer months while the other was as a
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laborer installing sprinkler systems in people’s
yards.
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The combined incomes began to nicely build
his bank account.
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Bernie’s self confidence was lifted through
his acceptance as one of the guys.
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He seemed to be a well-adjusted, happy young
teen, though he still struggled academically.
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But he was developing a knack for deception.
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On one occasion in English class each student
was to deliver an oral book report.
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Bernie hadn’t even opened the first page
of his book.
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When it came time for him to address the class
he rose and told the class that his book was
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called Hunting and Fishing by Peter Gunn.
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He then went on to make up names, dates and
details of a book that never existed.
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The teacher missed the pun and the reference
to popular TV detective, Peter Gunn.
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She gave him a high commendation.
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While it was pretty clear to anyone who bothered
to look that Bernie Madoff wasn’t book smart,
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he had an innate smartness that eluded all
of his peers.
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That smartness revolved around the ability
to make money.
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As his bank account swelled, and those of
his ‘smarter’ classmates didn’t, he
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came to realize that money could be the thing
that brought him fulfillment.
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During his first year at Far Rockaway High,
Bernie came across a popular, outgoing girl
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by the name of Ruthie Alpern.
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Her personality was the mirror opposite to
his, but soon they were inseparable, not just
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at school, but also at each other’s houses.
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Bernie graduated from Far Rockaway High School
in 1956.
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While the rest of his classmates headed off
to Harvard or Yale, he travelled south to
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enroll at the University of Alabama.
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Even though he told his friends that he had
been recruited to the university’s swim
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team, it escaped nobody’s attention that
getting into this university was much easier
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than any of the colleges up north.
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But Bernie didn’t stay in Alabama for long.
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He was just too far away from his beloved
Ruthie, back in New York.
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So, he enrolled at Hofstra College on Long
Island, where he studied political science.
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Catching the Investment Bug
Bernie’s father Ralph began dabbling in
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the stock market in the mid-1950’s and it
was from him that Bernie’s fascination with
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the subject began.
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During his first year at Hofstra, he was already
working as a stockbroker, though not holding
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a broker’s license.
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His father was also apparently trading illegally,
although his mother, Sylvia had two securities
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companies registered to her name.
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When the Securities and Exchange Commission
came down on her in 1963 for not filing financial
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statements, she closed down both businesses.
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This was just one of a slew of financial turmoils
that plagued the Madoff family in the 1960’s.
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Ralph was involved in a number of businesses
with others that fell apart.
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On one occasion a $9000 lien was placed on
the house, after which Ralph transferred the
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title the home to his wife to avoid not losing
it.
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In 1959, Bernie and Ruthie were married.
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The following year he graduated from the Hofstra
College with a bachelor’s degree in political
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science.
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They moved into a one-bedroom apartment in
Bayside, Queens.
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Bernie enlisted in the U.S. Army Reserves
in order to void the draft.
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He was given a commission as a second lieutenant
and assigned to the headquarters of the 1st
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Army, based on Governor’s Island in New
York Harbor.
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The duties were light, involving administration.
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Bernie served for the next three and a half
years, mainly on the weekends.
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Out on His Own
After graduating from Hofstra, Bernie enrolled
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at the Brooklyn Law School.
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But this effort petered out within a year
and he dropped out.
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He had, with the full backing of his wife,
made the fateful decision to go out on his
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own and pursue his passion.
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At the age of 22, he registered his business,
Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities.
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Madoff passed the General Securities Representative
Exam, allowing him to get a stockbroker’s
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license.
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On the same day he passed the far more difficult
General Securities Principal exam.
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He also passed this.
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So, in one day he gained the right to not
only operate as a stock broker, but to run
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his own brokerage firm.
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Bernie later claimed that he began the business
with the aid of a $50,000 loan from his father
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in-law, Saul Alpern.
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Saul also provided space in his Manhattan
Accounting firm as a base of operations.
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Bernie specialized in buying and selling stocks
that were too low for the big firms to worry
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about.
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This meant that he was dealing with very minor
or brand-new companies.
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These were known as penny stocks.
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The work involved long hours, cold calls and
little reward.
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After a few months, Bernie added a second
arm to the business – investing on behalf
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of individuals.
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Bernie’s first personal investment client
was a dressmaker by the name of Carl Shapiro.
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He handed the newbie investor the sum of a
hundred thousand dollars to invest on his
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behalf.
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Bernie grew this fund impressively and the
two men developed a business relationship
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that would make them both fabulously wealthy.
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On the basis of this success, Bernie set his
sights higher.
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He designed an investment concept based on
people who he called feeders who would find
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investors to bring in cash.
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He would then invest and grow that cash, keep
a portion of it and disburse the rest back
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to the investor.
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As feeders, Bernie turned to the other people
in his immediate business environment – his
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father in law Saul and the two young accountants
who worked for him.
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The problem was that none of these three were
registered stock brokers, which made their
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involvement illegal.
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Over the next three years, his three feeder’s
brought millions of dollars in investment
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finance to Bernie.
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The mom and pop investors were all making
money, so everyone was happy.
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In just one deal in the late 1960’s, Bernie
made a commission of $60,000 on the sale of
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100,000 shares.
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With the incredible success of the business,
Bernie and Ruthie were able to move to suburban
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Long Island in 1966.
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By then they had a two-year-old named Mark,
and Ruthie was pregnant with their second
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child, Andrew.
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High Flyer
Around 1970, Bernie also moved his business.
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He relocated to 40 Exchange Place, just one
block from the New York Stock Exchange.
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Bernie quickly embraced computer technology,
outfitting his new office with the latest
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equipment.
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He also pushed the Cincinnati stock exchange
to host a third market, getting them a quarter
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of a million dollars to upgrade their computer
system.
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The result of this initiative was the National
Association of Securities Dealers Automated
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Quotations, or NASDAQ.
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The NASDAQ changed the game, allowing brokers
to see quotes from other traders all over
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the world.
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Madoff’s business, which had already been
flying high, now hit the stratosphere.
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He quickly established a reputation as the
wizard of Wall Street.
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Over the next twenty years, he served in various
capacities on the National Association of
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Securities Dealers, which was a self-regulatory
body.
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As the 1980’s drew to a close, Bernie was
making north of a hundred million dollars
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a year.
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In 1990 he served as chairman of the NASDAQ,
repeating in 1991 and 1993.
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The Ponzi Scheme
According to Bernie’s own court testimony,
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he began his Ponzi scheme in 1991.
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However, many people believe that he had been
doing it long before then.
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He couldn’t explain why he did it as he
was amazingly successful in his legitimate
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business activities.
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He stated, “I had more than enough money
to support my lifestyle and my family’s
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lifestyle.
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I didn’t need to do this for that . . . I
don’t know why.”
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The original Ponzi scheme was named for Charles
Ponzi who promised returns of 50 percent on
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a 90-day investment in the 1920’s.
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The scheme uses income from new investors
to pay promised interested rates to original
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investors.
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The word of these fabulous returns quickly
spreads, attracting new investors and the
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scheme keeps perpetuating itself.
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Of course, the person behind the scheme rakes
in a huge amount of commission off the top.
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Ponzi scammers encourage investors to stay
in the game for as long as possible in order
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to maximize their profits.
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This ensures that plenty of money stays in
the kitty.
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There is very little in the way of real reporting
of returns.
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At some point every Ponzi scheme will collapse.
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This will either occur when the scammer takes
the money and does a runner, the cash flow
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dries up as it becomes more difficult to attract
more investors or too many people pull out
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and demand the principal and interest be paid
to them.
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Because of his auspicious standing in the
trading world, Madoff was above suspicion
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for many years.
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On top of this Bernie and Ruth had been huge
political donors from 1991 onwards.
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They were supporters of the Democrat party,
gifting many thousands of dollars to the Democratic
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Senatorial Campaign Committee.
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Members of the Madoff family served in positions
of authority in the Security Industries and
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Financial Markets Association (SIFMA).
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Bernie himself contributed some 56,000 to
SIFMA in the 2000’s.
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In addition to the prestige of his position,
Bernie was extremely charismatic.
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He came across as a person that people could
trust.
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When this was combined with his stellar reputation
as a genius investor, it was difficult for
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people to resist the temptation to invest
their money with him.
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In fact, during the 2000’s people viewed
it as a privilege to be given the opportunity
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to invest with his firm.
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Bernie was also careful not to set his promised
interest rate too high.
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He settled upon a rate of 12 percent which
he found to be the perfect sweet spot to attract
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customers without raising suspicion.
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The Unravelling
In 1992 a couple of people who had invested
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in the successor to Saul Alpern’s accounting
company complained about irregularities to
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the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
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The practice of drawing investors for Bernie
had continued with the new owners of the accounting
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firm.
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On this occasion, the money was returned to
these investors and no further action was
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taken.
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In 1999.
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Harry Markopolis, the chief investment officer
for options trading company Rampart Investment
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Management became aware that one of his company’s
major trading partners was making investments
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with Madoff’s wealth fund management business
and receiving constant returns of 1-2 percent
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per month.
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Markopolis was asked to study Madoff’s revenue
stream in order to produce a replica model
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which would lure business away from Bernie
and toward them.
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According to Markopolis, within four minutes
of looking at Bernie’s figures he knew that
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they were fake.
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There was none of the price volatility that
was fundamental to financial investment.
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The interest rate reliability was simply too
good to be true.
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He was convinced that Madoff was running a
Ponzi scheme.
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He laid a formal complaint with the SEC in
the spring of 2000.
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The SEC, however, refused to take action.
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It seems that they were just as spellbound
by Bernie as the investing public.
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But Markopolis did not give up.
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In 2001, he forwarded a second, more detailed,
complaint to the SEC.
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But, once again the SEC failed to take action
– this despite Markopolis offering to go
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undercover into the Madoff operation to obtain
concrete proof that Bernie wasn’t actually
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trading.
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In 2004, a lawyer for the Securities and Exchange
Commission reported to her branch chief that
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her investigation into the actions of Bernie
Madoff raised a number of red flags.
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However, she was told in no uncertain terms
to shut down her Madoff investigation and
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focus on more important matters.
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It just so happened that senior official at
the SEC was involved in a romantic relationship
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with Bernie’s niece Shana Madoff.
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Madoff was able to keep the ruse going because
investment kept flowing in right through the
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mid-2000s.
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But then, in 2008, with the economy constricting,
the money pouring in began to dry up.
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With the stock market crash of September 29th,
investment funds stopped up completely.
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What was worse, people were demanding their
money and returns.
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But Bernie’s account at JP Morgan Chase
did not have the funds to pay them.
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He owed around $7 billion, but only had between
two and three hundred million to pay out.
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The Consequence
By early December, 2008, Bernie knew that
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the game was up.
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On December 9th, he told his brother Peter
about his fraudulent activities.
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That same day he revealed to his sons, Mark
and Andrew, that he was finished and that
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his whole life as a successful investment
broker had been one big lie.
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Bernie’s sons immediately contacted a lawyer
after leaving their father’s presence.
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He put them in touch with the SEC.
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Two days later, on December 11th, 2008, Bernie
Madoff was arrested and charged with securities
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fraud.
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He managed to come up with the $10 million
bail and retain his freedom.
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However, he was confined to house arrest at
his Upper East Side penthouse apartment and
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was under 24-hour monitor surveillance.
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On March 12, 2009, Madoff pleaded guilty to
eleven federal felonies.
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Among them were securities fraud, money laundering
and perjury.
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He claimed that no-one was inclined with or
knew about his crime, which amounted to the
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largest Ponzi scheme in history.
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At that March 12th hearing, Judge Denny Chin
revoked Bernie’s bail on the grounds that
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he was flight risk and had him thrown into
the Metropolitan Correctional Center.
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His lawyers tried to get this decision revoked
but were unsuccessful.
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As a result, Bernie stayed in jail until his
sentencing on June 29, 2009.
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The Bankruptcy Trustee estimated that $36
billion was invested into Bernie’s Ponzi
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scheme.
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Half of that was returned to investors, with
the rest going missing.
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A week prior to sentencing, Madoff’s lawyer,
Ira Sorkin, filed a pre-sentence letter to
[1022]
the judge requesting a term of 12 years for
his client.
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This was largely based on insurance industry
estimates that his life span was estimated
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to be a further 13 years.
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The prosecution time-out in request for a
term of 150 years imprisonment.
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Three days before delivering his sentence,
Judge Chin ordered that $179 million worth
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of Bernie’s sets be seized.
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The Bankruptcy Trustee also sued Madoff’s
sons, Mark and Andrew along with other family
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members for $198 million on the basis of negligence
and breach of fiduciary duty.
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On June 29, 2009, Judge Chin delivered his
sentence.
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He followed through on the prosecution recommendation
and gave Madoff 150 years of jail time.
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He noted at the time of delivering his sentence
that they had not received any mitigating
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factor letters or testimonies and commented
that ‘this absence of support ws telling.’
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At the time of his sentencing, Madoff made
the following comment . . .
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I have left a legacy of shame, as some of
my victims have pointed out, to my family
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and my grandchildren.
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This is something I will live in for the rest
of my life.
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I'm sorry.
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Despite these words, the judge did not belief
that Madoff had been entirely forthcoming
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about the details of his massive scam, which
Chin referred to as an ‘extraordinary evil.’
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He also agreed with prosecutors that the Ponzi
scam started long before the 1991 that Bernie
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had given.
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After the sentencing, Ruthie Madoff made her
first public statement with the following
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words . . .
I am breaking my silence now because my reluctance
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to speak has been interpreted as indifference
or lack of sympathy for the victims of my
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husband Bernie's crime, which is exactly the
opposite of the truth.
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I am embarrassed and ashamed.
[1112]
Like everyone else, I feel betrayed and confused.
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The man who committed this horrible fraud
is not the man whom I have known for all these
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years.
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Bernie was confined to the Federal Corrections
Institute Butner Medium, outside of Butner,
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North Carolina.
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He remains there to this day.
[1126]
It was reported in 2009 that he got into a
fight with another elderly inmate, however,
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the Federal Bureau of Prisons denied this
but said that he had been admitted to hospital
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for hypertension.
[1136]
As of 2019, inmate #61727-054 is 81 years
of age.
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He is scheduled for release on November 14,
2139, at which time he would be 201 years
[1169]
of age.
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