TPM Muckraker

Posts on “Bernard Madoff: January 2009” in January 2009

A Thousand Mini-Madoffs Bloom

Call them the mini-Madoffs: Investment advisers accused of conducting Ponzi scams that echo the one allegedly pulled off by the disgraced Wall Street money manager.

In recent weeks, both the Wall Street Journal (sub. req.) and the New York Times report, a spate of mini-Madoffs has come to light

The Journal looked at SEC records and found an increase in cases in which the agency alleged Ponzi schemes. Last year, it brought at least 23 Ponzi cases, up from 15 in 2007. This year, it has already filed four. The paper explains why:

More schemes are emerging now, experts say, in part because of the economic downturn. Tough times have prompted people to seek to cash in their investments, only to find out their money is missing. New investment also dries up in slumps, making it harder for fraudulent funds to replenish their coffers and make the payments needed to keep their operations going.

Let's go down the list of the mini-Madoffs to emerge recently:

- Arthur Nadel, the missing Florida hedge-fund adviser, was arrested yesterday, accused by the feds of defrauding clients to the tune of millions of dollars.

- Nicholas Cosmo, a Long Island money manager, raised more than $370 million, promising eye-popping returns of 48 percent by funding commercial loans. But he lent little money and only about $746,000 remains, according to an affidavit. Cosmo surrendered to authorities Monday.

- Joseph S. Forte, an investment manager in Phildelphia, was accused by the SEC earlier this month of running a Ponzi scheme since at least 1995, claiming returns as high as 38 percent and raising $50 million.

- Darren Palmer, an Idaho Falls money manager, is being probed by state authorities, with investors claiming they lost up to $100 million in a Ponzi scheme.

- Marcus Schrenker, an Indiana financial adviser, was arrested in Florida earlier this month after apparently trying to stage his own death in a plane crash. He faces charges, in both states, of swindling investors.

- Rod Cameron Stringer of Texas is alleged by the SEC to have set up a Ponzi scheme that lured elderly investors, claiming annual returns of 61 percent.

- Robert C. Brown of California is accused by the SEC of using millions in clients' money "to pay for lavish personal expenses, such as upkeep on his Ferrari, limousine services and shopping trips."

- Anthony James of Florida set up a "classic Ponzo scheme", says the SEC, through which he got access to at least $2.4 million in client funds, which he used to pay for a six-bedroom home, a Porsche and season tickets to the Miami Heat.

There are more.

Sounds like the SEC's plans to beef up their enforcement unit can't happen quickly enough.


SEC's Enforcement Chief On How To Stop More Madoffs

After the Bernard Madoff fraud came to light, costing investors an estimated $50 billion, it emerged that the SEC had fallen down on the job, in part because, as we detailed last month, it had soft-pedaled its enforcement duty. And today, the head of the agency's Office of Compliance, Inspections and Examinations, Lori Richards, testified before the Senate Banking committee about how to prevent future Madoffs.

Richards said the agency plans to increase the frequency of its examinations of investment advisers, investigate the existence of unregulated advisers, and broadly consider different regulatory structures -- an idea that seems to have gained ground lately.

Richards said that in recent years, the number of registered investment advisers has grown past 10,000. OCIE has just 425 employees to oversee them. And Madoff wasn't even registered -- hence the need to begin monitoring them too.

It'll be a while until we know how all this will play out. But it certainly looks like under President Obama and new agency chair Mary Schapiro, enforcement will no longer take a backseat at SEC, as it did during the Bush years.


Did SEC Fail To Follow A Path To Madoff In 1992?

In recent weeks, the evidence that Bernard Madoff's alleged fraud goes back longer, and implicates more people, than we at first knew, has seemed to grow. And over the weekend, the New York Times added to that impression, with a lengthy takeout on a 1992 SEC investigation into Frank Avellino, an accountant tied to Madoff, who has admitted to not keeping conventional records.

Despite several red flags, the probe ended with Avellino paying only a small fine, and it never appears to have questioned Madoff's own operation.

Here's what seems to have happened:

Avellino and Madoff had had ties going back to the late 1950's, when Avellino worked as an accountant at a firm run by Madoff's father-in-law. Madoff even briefly ran his securities business from Avellino's office.

As the years passed, Avellino gradually shifted the focus of his business from accounting to raising money for Madoff's investment business. Then in 1992, the SEC received marketing materials showing that Avellino and his partner, Michael Bienes, had promised investors returns of up to 20 percent a year. Suspecting a Ponzi scheme, the government launched an investigation.

Avellino's explanation was simply that Madoff -- by then one of Wall Street's biggest stock traders -- was managing the money. Avellino said that if Madoff ever fell short of achieving a 13-20 percent return for investors, then Avellino and Bienes would make up the difference.

And that seems to have satisfied the SEC. As the Times puts it:

No one at the securities commission seems to have questioned why Mr. Avellino and Mr. Bienes offered clients a double-digit guaranteed return on money that they did not even control. Nor do the records offer any hint that the commission considered whether Mr. Madoff, rather than Avellino & Bienes, might be operating a Ponzi scheme.

Avellino returned money to investors, paid a fine, and shut down his business.

But when an audit was conducted by Price Waterhouse, it was discovered that Avellino didn't keep proper records. When Price Waterhouse asked Avellino to do so for 1992, he refused, writing:

"My experience has taught me to not commit any figures to scrutiny when, as in this case, it can be construed as 'bible' and subject to criticism. In this present instance, quite severely. I explained how the profit and loss can be computed from the records you now hold in your possession that Bernard L. Madoff and I supplied."

Still the SEC did nothing, and by the end of January 1993, the audit, too, was over.

Madoff and Avellino appear to still have ties. Madoff's current lawyer, Ira Sorkin, represented Avellino during the 1992 investigation. There's also this:

.In 2003, the Avellinos bought a $4.5 million house in Palm Beach less than five blocks from Mr. Madoff's house there. Their Manhattan apartment is similarly close to Mr. Madoff's apartment.

And Avellino may have been wired into Madoff's alleged fraud right up until the end. the Times reports:

A lawsuit claims that Mr. Avellino warned his housekeeper, who had invested with him, that her money was lost 10 days before Mr. Madoff's fraud became public.

There have been no indications that Avellino is a target of the SEC's current Madoff investigation. But at the least, he's a figure worth keeping an eye on.


Judge Lets Madoff Stay Free On Bail

A judge has ruled that against revoking Bernard Madoff's bail, meaning the disgraced investment advisor will get to stay in his $7 million Upper East Side apartment -- albeit under house arrest and 24-hr surveillance -- while awaiting trial.

Prosecutors had argued that Madoff should be sent to jail, after he mailed more than $1 million worth of personal items, including gold necklaces and watches, to family and friends, contravening a court order freezing Madoff's assets.

Madoff's lawyers contended that he simply didn't realize that mailing the items would contravene the order.

CNBC adds:

A court hearing tentatively scheduled for Monday on the criminal charges against Madoff has been adjourned for 30 days, his lawyers said.

Obama's SEC Nominee Headed For Bumpy Confirmation Hearing?

When Mary Schapiro was announced as Obama's pick for SEC chair, she was warmly received, in general, as someone likely to restore the agency's regulatory teeth after the free-market ideologues who ran the place under Bush.

But it looks Schapiro's confirmation hearings, set to begin this week, may not go perfectly smoothly all the same.

Schapiro heads the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, the non-governmental body that supervises oversees U.S. brokerages. And as we noted last week, Finra, under Schapiro, failed to catch Bernard Madoff's alleged "$50 billion ponzi scheme". Indeed, it conducted an inquiry into Madoff's operation that concluded, in 2007, that he had violated certain technical rules and had failed to promptly report some transactions, but identified no more serious wrong-doing -- a very similar story to the SEC's.

Still, it's also worth pointing out that Finra's investigation into Madoff was focused on his brokerage operation, which, according to a Finra spokeswoman, is all that it is legal empowered to look into. Madoff's business was split into brokerage and investment-advisory arms -- but the alleged fraud, investigators believe, was centered on the investment-advisory arm. So Finra would appear to bear less responsibility than SEC for missing Madoff.

But that's not the only potential confirmation headache for Schapiro. She was accused in two recent lawsuits of making misleading statements in an effort to build support for the creation of Finra, which was created two years ago by merging the regulatory units of the NYSE and the Nasdaq. Schapiro headed the Nasdaq regulator at the time, and became the head of Finra, seeing her yearly salary rise from $2 million to $3.1 million.

The New York Times explains the details:

Among the misstatements that she is accused of making is that the Internal Revenue Service had prohibited the NASD from paying each member more than $35,000 as part of the merger deal. Although an NASD proxy statement issued while the deal was pending said that the I.R.S. would not permit the organization to give more compensation to members, the I.R.S. did not actually issue a ruling on the matter until March 2007, long after the deal closed and three months after the members voted to approve it.

The first lawsuit was rejected by a Federal judge but is on appeal. The second suit, which is similar and was brought by a former SEC lawyer, appears to have been filed soon after Schapiro was nominated to head the SEC, though lawyers for the plaintiffs say it was in the works before then.

Looks like those hearings could be more lively than we thought. We'll be watching closely later this week...

Madoff Had Signed Checks To Employees In Desk At Time Of Arrest

The Wall Street Journal is reporting on its homepage that, according to prosecutors, Bernard Madoff had $173 million in signed checks made out to his friends and employees in his office desk at the time of his arrest.

News reports immediately after Madoff's arrest revealed that, after confessing the alleged fraud to his sons, he asked them for time to distribute bonuses to his firm's employees.

From the Journal at the time:

Mr. Madoff told them he planned to surrender to authorities, but first, he wanted to pay certain employees portions of the $200 million to $300 million dollars that was left.

And earlier this week, the Associated Press reported:

Prosecutors on Monday said disgraced financier Bernard Madoff violated bail conditions by mailing about $1 million worth of jewelry and other assets to relatives and should be jailed without bail.

Investigators have been working to figure out what Madoff did with the billions he's alleged to have stolen.

Yesterday, the Journal reported that shortly before his arrest, Madoff received $250 million from Carl Shapiro, an early friend and backer, in what was believed to be an effort to stave off his firm's collapse.


SEC IG Can't Compel Testimony From Key Madoff Witnesses

Yesterday we noted that, based on his testimony before Congress, SEC Inspector General David Kotz appears to be conducting an aggressive investigation of the agency's failures in connection with the Bernard Madoff case.

But on one crucial point, Kotz's tetimony was much less heartening.

Questioned by lawmakers about his authority to gain access to documents and witness testimony, Kotz admitted that he didn't have the power to subpoena former SEC employees for their testimony. (We'll post the video or the relevant portion of the transcript when it becomes available.)

Here's why that matters. Three SEC enforcement staffers -- Assistant Regional Director Doria Bachenheimer, Branch Chief Meaghan Cheung, and Staff Attorney Simona Suh -- were listed on the "closing document" for the 2006-07 inquiry into Madoff, which has emerged as exhibit A in the case against the agency. According to an SEC enforcement source, only Suh, the most junior of the three, remains at the agency. (A receptionist at the agency's New York office, where all three had been based, confirmed to TPMmuckraker that Bachenheimer and Cheung no longer worked at the SEC.)

So Kotz wont have the power to compel testimony from the two SEC staffers who were perhaps the most central on-the-ground players in the agency's failure to catch Madoff. That may well limit his ability to draw broad conclusions about the SEC's slip-up, and how to avoid similar mishaps in the future.


Lawyer: Whistleblower Still Wants To Testify

We noted earlier today that Madoff whistleblower Harry Markopolos over the weekend cancelled his scheduled testimony before a House committee, citing illness. Markopolos had been one of the key witnesses scheduled to appear, so his eleventh-hour withdrawal raised a few eyebrows.

We've now spoken to Markopolos' lawyer, Phil Michael, who assured TPMmuckraker that his client was incapacitated and unable to leave his home, and that Markopolos still intends to find a time to testify in the near future.

We look forward to hearing from him.

Prosecutor: Madoff Violated Bail By Sending Assets To Relatives

Did Madoff violate bail?

The Associated Press reports:

Prosecutors on Monday said disgraced financier Bernard Madoff violated bail conditions by mailing about $1 million worth of jewelry and other assets to relatives and should be jailed without bail.

"The defendant's recent actions amount to obstruction of justice," Assistant U.S. Attorney Marc Litt told a judge at a hearing in federal court in Manhattan.

Madoff's lawyer, Ira Sorkin, described the items as heirlooms that included cufflinks and antique watches. He said they were not significant assets. The items were sent to Madoff's children and to unidentified friends vacationing in Florida.

The prosecutor said the case against Madoff "is strong and getting stronger."


SEC IG, Probing Madoff, Looks To Be On The Warpath

SEC Inspector General David Kotz, who is conducting an investigation into the agency's failure to detect Bernard Madoff's alleged "$50 billion ponzi scheme" despite conducting several probes of Madoff's business over the last decade, testified before Congress today.

And from the sound of his opening statement, his inquiry could be worth paying attention to.

Here, paraphrased, are a few highlights from the statement:

- Kotz has asked SEC employees to preserve relevant documents.

- He has sought information from the office of SEC chair Chris Cox, and with senior officials from the agency's compliance section, whose performance is at the heart of concerns that the SEC fell down on the job.

- He has obtained emails sent by former and current employees, both those at the Washington DC headquarters and in the New York and Boston regional offices.

- He hopes to add four new investigators to his team, and is seeking additional office space and administrative help.

- He has scheduled an on-the-record interview with Harry Markopoulos for later this month. Markopolos, who first rasied concern about Madoff's business in a lengthy complaint to the SEC, was scheduled to testify before Congress today but cancelled, citing illness.

- He'll probe conflicts of interest at SEC stemming from Madoff's and his family's relationships with SEC officials.

- He'll also look at the overall operations of the enforcement division.

- And his probe will be "independent and as hard-hitting as necessary."

More news from today's hearing to follow...

Madoff Whistleblower Cancels Congressional Testimony

When the House committee that will hold hearings today on Bernard Madoff and the role of the SEC announced its witness list, one of the most interesting names was that of Harry Markopolos. The former rival investor to Bernard Madoff, who had first argued in a complaint to the SEC that Madoff's business was not on the level, was the closest thing this scandal has had to a heroic whistleblower.

But now Markopolos has pulled out, citing illness. Given the low public profile he has maintained since his role in the scandal became public, that move raised our interest.

A spokesperson for Rep. Paul Kanjorski, who chairs the sub-committee holding the hearings, told TPMmuckraker in an email, referring to Markopolos: "He has said that he looks forward to testifying at a subsequent hearing."

So perhaps we'll get to hear from him in the end. But until we do, this will bear watching.

Obama's Pick For SEC Chair Didn't Catch Madoff While At Finra

The Wall Street Journal has a deeper look at the various government investigations into Bernard Madoff's business, stretching back over the last 16 years -- all of which failed to detect the alleged "$50 billion ponzi scheme" that Madoff is said to have been running.

Among other nuggets, the Journal reports:

The failure to stop Mr. Madoff also is an embarrassment for Mary Schapiro, the Finra chief who has been nominated by President-elect Barack Obama as the next SEC chairman. Finra [the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, an industry-run watchdog for brokerage firms] was involved in several investigations of Mr. Madoff's firm, concluding in 2007 that it violated technical rules and failed to report certain transactions in a timely way.

Ms. Schapiro declined to comment. Mr. Cox has previously acknowledged mistakes by the SEC. The agency declined to comment.

Close SEC watchers generally have said they expect that under Schapiro, the agency will be a more vigilant watchdog than it has been under President Bush's various chairs, culminating with Chris Cox.

Still, Finra's failure, under Schapiro, to catch Madoff is another reminder that, even though the SEC's problems were in part a result of the pure free-market ideology to which the Bush administration largely subscribed, those problems likely won't immediately be solved by the change of administrations.

Report: SEC Probing Other Madoff-Style Ponzi Schemes

Was Madoff just the tip of the iceberg?

The SEC is investigating at least one case in which investors may have been cheated out of as much as $1 billion, by money managers using tactics similar to those alleged to have been employed by Madoff, Bloomberg reports, based on anonymous sources "with knowledge of the inquiries."

It adds:

Regulators may discover additional Ponzi arrangements as declining stock markets prompt investors to withdraw their cash and they question how their money is being managed. This week, the SEC said it halted what the agency described as a $23 million scam targeting Haitian-Americans, and said the Florida- based operators had tried as recently as last month to bring in more investors.

And it throws in an additional nugget of news stemming from Madoff's providing a list of his assets to the SEC on Wednesday:

A catalog of Madoff's assets provided by his attorneys to the SEC on Dec. 31 hasn't revealed any major sources of additional cash, a person familiar with the matter said.

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