Houston Chronicle

No checks yet for many Madoff victims

But a recovery firm has piled up $38.8 million in billings so far

- By Erik Larson BLOOMBERG NEWS

A firm hired by the U.S. to distribute $4 billion to victims of Bernard Madoff ’s Ponzi scheme has racked up $38.8 million in billings over four years. The investors are still waiting for their first checks, though.

The Justice Department disclosed its payments to Richard Breeden, the Madoff Victim Fund administra­tor, in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request from Bloomberg News. Breeden’s fees, which are being paid from cash in the fund, cover his work through 2016.

The delay highlights how, 8½ years after Madoff ’s arrest, investors are still scrambling to recover money from a U.S. fund that was announced with great fanfare. Victims have recovered billions of dollars from another fund, but they have yet to be made whole.

‘Very frustratin­g’

“It’s very frustratin­g that people are making money off us like this, using money that was recovered for victims,” said Daphne Brogdon, a Food Network personalit­y, whose family lost about $5 million in the Madoff scam. “They’re eating away at whatever percentage we could possibly get.”

Messages left with a representa­tive of Breeden’s firm, RCB Fund Services, weren’t returned. Justice Department spokeswoma­n Dawn Dearden declined to comment on the fees or claims process but pointed to informatio­n on the fund’s website.

“We now expect that the initial distributi­on will take place sometime in 2017 and will be larger than we originally had anticipate­d,” Breeden, a former chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, wrote on the website.

The compensati­on fund was created in December 2012 to repay thousands of Madoff’s victims after the U.S. seized $2.4 billion from the estate of one of his biggest investors, the late Jeffry Picower. The fund grew by $1.7 billion following a 2014 forfeiture deal with Madoff’s bank, JPMorgan Chase & Co., which was accused of turning a blind eye to the scam.

Breeden’s hiring came months after he handed out more than $728 million to about 8,500 Adelphia Communicat­ions victims, which he described as “the largest single distributi­on of forfeited assets to victims in Department of Justice history.”

Breeden, 67, estimated in February 2016 that as many as 40,000 victims would get initial payments by the end of that year. They didn’t. An update on the website in January cited the time-consuming claims process and issues with inadequate paperwork from some victims.

The Justice Department is “notoriousl­y slow” making decisions on forfeited assets, said Jon Barooshian, a white-collar defense lawyer in Boston who has dealt with forfeiture issues.

“I’m surprised it’s taking so long, but I don’t know if the fault will fall at Richard Breeden’s feet. It might be more of an internal DOJ issue,” said Barooshian, who isn’t involved in the Madoff case.

Another’s success

By comparison, Irving Picard, who is overseeing the liquidatio­n of Madoff’s firm, has paid out more than $9 billion since 2009. Picard, a lawyer at Baker & Hostetler, brought numerous lawsuits to recover assets, and his fund is administer­ed separately from Breeden’s under different U.S. laws.

Picard has racked up considerab­le fees himself, telling ABC News in 2015 that his firm might collect as much as $1 billion when all is done. He called it a “very good return on an investment.” His fees are paid by the industryfi­nanced Securities Investor Protection Corp. rather than from money recovered for victims.

Breeden will eventually make recommenda­tions to the Justice Department’s Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section on which claims to pay and which to deny. His firm has already been paid the $38.8 million in fees, the Justice Department said.

Feeder funds

Picard accepted claims only from Madoff’s direct account holders. That meant customers of socalled feeder funds, which directed cash to Madoff’s firm for years, weren’t eligible. Feeder funds could, however, file claims with Picard and repay their investors if they received payments from the trustee.

Breeden accepted claims from all Madoff investors, including feeder funds. That increased the amount of work, particular­ly because Madoff’s records don’t have any informatio­n about feeder-fund customers that could be used to verify claims.

Madoff, 79, pleaded guilty to fraud in 2009 and is serving a 150-year sentence. His victims lost a combined $17.5 billion in principal, though their final account statements totaled about $64 billion including profit from bogus trades.

Two TV movies

His downfall has been the subject of two TV films. In February 2016, an ABC docudrama starred Richard Dreyfuss as Madoff and Blythe Danner as his wife Ruth.

This month HBO is presenting “Madoff: The Wizard of Lies.” Robert De Niro is Madoff and Michelle Pfeiffer is Ruth.

 ?? Louis Lanzano / Associated Press file ?? Ponzi scheme leader Bernard Madoff arrives at Manhattan federal court in March 2009. He pleaded guilty that year to fraud and is serving a 150-year prison sentence.
Louis Lanzano / Associated Press file Ponzi scheme leader Bernard Madoff arrives at Manhattan federal court in March 2009. He pleaded guilty that year to fraud and is serving a 150-year prison sentence.
 ?? HBO ?? Michelle Pfeiffer plays Bernard Madoff’s wife, and Robert DeNiro plays Madoff in HBO’s “Madoff: The Wizard of Lies,” which premiered this month.
HBO Michelle Pfeiffer plays Bernard Madoff’s wife, and Robert DeNiro plays Madoff in HBO’s “Madoff: The Wizard of Lies,” which premiered this month.
 ??  ?? Breeden
Breeden

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