Dayton Daily News

'Mini Madoff' escapes prison camp in Calif.

Offifficia­l says Ponzi schemer likely has hidden cache.

- ByMikeCart­er

SEATTLE — The escape of FrederickD­arrenBerg, Washington­state’s“MiniMadoff­ffffffffff,” froma federalmin­imum-security prison camp in California last week surprised no one who has ever had dealings with him.

“I’msure he’s been planningth­is foryears,” saidMark Calvert, who spent years unraveling Berg’s crimes as the court-appointed bankruptcy trustee for Berg’s Meridianin­vestment groups.

Calvert, who tracked more than $150 million in investment­s stolen by Berg to prop up his monstrous Ponzi scheme, said “at least a couple million” remained unaccounte­dfor, andhepresu­mes Berg squirreled some or all of it away, anticipati­ng his escape.

“Think ‘ The Shawshank Redemption,’ “said Calvert, referring to the 1994 hit movie in which a wrongly convictedm­anadapts tobrutal prison life while secretly chipping away at a wall behind a poster of actress Rita Hayworth, then Raquel Welch, in his cell. After 19 years, he escapes and flflees to a beach in Mexico.

“The only difference is Berg just walked away,” Calvert said. “He did not have to cut a hole in a wall or crawl through a 600-yard sewer pipe.

“I fifind it disturbing that a person with his history, his sentence and his age, that he would be placed in a facilitywh­ere he could simply leave.”

Calvert is not alone. Craig Edwards, appointed by Calvert to represent the nearly 700 investors who lost almost $ 150 million through Berg’s scam, said investors were “extremely disappoint­ed” that he was placed in aminimum-security facility, given the impact of his crimes and his propensity for deceit.

The federalBur­eauofPriso­ns has declined to offer any details of Berg’s escape except to say that he left the 128- bed minimum-security federal prison farmadjace­nt tothemaxim­um-securityfe­deral penitentia­ry inAtwater, California, on Dec. 6.

The maximum- security Atwater prison holds 1,200 male inmates considered among the most dangerous in the federal prison system.

The bureau has also declined to discuss how and why Berg was housed in minimumsec­urity, given the extent of his crimes and the length of his sentence, the amount of restitutio­n he owes and his relatively young age.

Berg had served roughly sevenyears ( he received two years credit for time in custodybef­oretrial) ofan18-year prison sentenced imposed in 2012 by U.S. District Judge Richard Jones after pleading guilty to wire fraud, bankruptcy fraud and money laundering.

Berg turned 55 and owes roughly $140million in restitutio­n.

Merced County Sheriffff Vernon Warnke said he was notifified of Berg’s escape about 4: 10 p. m. Dec. 6 — about 40 minutes after the afternoon head count at the camp. According to an inmatemanu­al, the3:30p.m. head count is the only one in which inmates are required to be counted standing by their beds.

“From what I was told, they’re pretty sure he had help and that he was well out of the area” by the time he was discovered missing, the sheriffff said.

The maximum- security prison, he said, is enclosed in a double fencewith guard towers, electronic sensors and other security devices, according to Bureau of Prisons informatio­n. The adjacent camp is not enclosed, Warnke said.

The U.S. Marshals Service has assigned a deputy to the case, said Deputy U.S. MarshalMic­haelMartin­ez in Fresno. The service is asking residents and Berg’s friends andfamily inCaliforn­ia, Oregon and Washington to be on the lookout.

Calvert, the trustee, said he’s going to be hard to fifind.

Berg, he said, has traveled extensivel­y and likely escaped to a country with no extraditio­n treaty with the United States.

Berg, he said, is “a very, very smart, very cleverman” who proved his skills as a liar and conman by successful­ly pulling off a decadelong­Ponzi schemeunde­r the noses of auditors and regulators while stealingmo­ney from friends and clients.

His thefts earned him the nickname “Mini Madoffffff­ffffff,” a nod to the similarity of his crimes to those of Bernie Madoffffff­ffffff, the New York master conman responsibl­e for nearly $150 billion in losses in 2008.

Total claims against Berg in the case topped $154 million and involved nearly 700 individual creditors. The trustee was able to recover about $40 million — the rest was lost to Berg’s scheme and lavish lifestyle, which included two yachts, two private jets, a propensity for Porsche sports cars and several mansions, including a waterfront home on Mercer Island.

He turned himself in “palms up” to the FBI and federal prosecutor­s in 2010, claiming he wanted to come clean. But, prosecutor­s said, he was actually trying to get in front of the impending collapse of his decadelong fraud.

Fromthat point forward, according to court documents, just about allBergdid was lie, mislead and misdirect — and try to sneak out of the country.

Berg was charged in 2010 by federal prosecutor­s after the discovery that he had taken steps to set up an offfffffff­fffshore trust in the Central American country of Belize, andhadhidd­en$400,000to open itwith. The U.S. Attorney’s Offiffice asked the court to order him into custody, pending trial.

Berg argued that being locked upmade itmorediff­ifficult for himto help the bankruptcy trustee recover assets for the creditors.

At a Dec. 1, 2010, hearing, Assistant U.S. Attorney Norm Barbosa laid out the government’s concerns in the starkest terms.

“Mr. Berg is not a person that can be trusted,” the prosecutor said. “He has been perfecting the art of lying and manipulati­ng for many, many years.”

Barbosa, who is still a federal prosecutor, declined to comment on the escape, except to remind a reporter that it is the Bureau of Prisons, not the U.S. Attorney’s Offiffice, that determines an inmate’s security risk and housing.

 ?? GINA FERAZZI / LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Washington state Ponzi schemer Frederick Darren Berg escaped froma federal minimum-security prison camp in California.
GINA FERAZZI / LOS ANGELES TIMES Washington state Ponzi schemer Frederick Darren Berg escaped froma federal minimum-security prison camp in California.

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