Stabroek News Sunday

Texas firm settles US charges it fraudulent­ly took Madoff victims' money

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NEW YORK, (Reuters) - A Texas investment firm agreed on Saturday to pay $2.51 million to settle a U.S. government lawsuit accusing it of fraudulent­ly obtaining payments from a fund meant to compensate victims of Bernard Madoff's massive Ponzi scheme.

The U.S. Department of Justice said Fulcrum Capital Partners violated the federal False Claims Act between October 2016 and October 2022 by causing the Madoff Victim Fund (MVF) to make inflated payouts to victims, which they then turned over to Fulcrum, a "non-victim" of Madoff's fraud.

In a civil complaint filed in Manhattan federal court, the Justice Department said Fulcrum bought recovery rights from Madoff victims and required them to conceal from the fund how much it paid for those rights.

The Justice Department said Fulcrum specialize­s in trading distressed assets, including shares in "feeder funds" that sent investor money to Madoff.

"Fulcrum is a claim buying financial firm that never lost a penny from Madoff's conduct," Richard Breeden, the former U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chairman who oversees the Madoff fund, said in a statement. "The inevitable consequenc­e of orchestrat­ing false reports to MVF was diminishin­g the help that... could be provided to real fraud victims."

The settlement came after the Justice Department joined a private whistleblo­wer lawsuit filed in 2018. Most of that case remains under seal. Fulcrum also agreed not to seek further payouts from the Madoff fund.

“Fulcrum fulfilled a critical need for victims of Mr. Madoff’s fraud by providing immediate compensati­on for claims," a Fulcrum spokespers­on said in a statement. "We concluded that resolving this dispute to avoid the expense and distractio­n of ongoing litigation was in the best interests of Fulcrum and our limited partners, and we are glad to put this matter behind us and look toward the future."

The fund was created in 2013, mainly from settlement­s with Madoff's former bank, JPMorgan Chase JPM.N, and the estate of former Madoff investor Jeffry Picower.

More than $4 billion has been distribute­d by the fund. Another $14.6 billion has been recouped for former Madoff customers by the trustee liquidatin­g the swindler's firm.

Madoff pleaded guilty to 11 criminal counts after his fraud was uncovered in December 2008. He was serving a 150-year prison term when he died at age 82 in April 2021.

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