Houston Chronicle

A LEGACY OF GREED

Architect of largest-ever Ponzi scheme, he became the face of fraud

- By Diana B. Henriques

Bernard L. Madoff, the one-time senior statesman of Wall Street who in 2008 became the human face of an era of financial misdeeds and missteps for running the largest and possibly most devastatin­g Ponzi scheme in financial history, died on Wednesday at the Federal Medical Center in Butner, N.C. He was 82.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons confirmed the death. Madoff, who was serving a 150-year prison sentence, had asked for early release in February 2020, saying in a court filing that he had less than 18 months to live after entering the final stages of kidney disease and that he had been admitted to palliative care.

In phone interviews, Madoff expressed remorse for his misdeeds, saying he had “made a terrible mistake.”

“I’m terminally ill,” he said. “There’s no cure for my type of disease. So, you know, I’ve served. I’ve served 11 years already, and, quite frankly, I’ve suffered through it.”

Madoff ’s enormous fraud began among friends, relatives and country club acquaintan­ces in Manhattan and Long Island — a population that shared his professed interest in Jewish philanthro­py — but ultimately grew to encompass major charities like Hadassah, universiti­es like Brandeis and Yeshiva, institutio­nal investors, and wealthy families in Europe, Latin America and Asia.

Buttressed by elaborate account statements and a deep reservoir of trust from his investors and regulators, Madoff steered his fraud scheme safely through a severe recession in the early 1990s, a global financial crisis in 1998 and the anxious aftermath of the terrorist attacks in September 2001. But the financial meltdown that began in the mortgage market in mid-2007 and reached a climax with the failure of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 was his undoing.

Hedge funds and other institutio­nal investors, pressured by demands from their own clients, began to take hundreds of millions of dollars from their Madoff accounts. By December 2008, more than $12 billion had been withdrawn and little fresh cash was coming in to cover redemption­s.

Faced with ruin, Madoff confessed to

his two sons that his supposedly profitable moneymanag­ement operation was actually “one big lie.” They reported his confession to law enforcemen­t and the next day, Dec. 11, 2008, he was arrested at his Manhattan penthouse.

The victims of his fraud, some of whom went overnight from comfortabl­e wealth to frantic desperatio­n, numbered in the thousands and were scattered from Palm Beach, Fla., to the Persian Gulf. The paper losses totaled $64.8 billion, including the fictional profits he had credited to customer accounts over at least two decades.

More than money was lost. At least two people, in despair over their losses, committed suicide. A major Madoff investor suffered a fatal heart attack after months of contentiou­s litigation over his role in the scheme. Some investors lost their homes. Others lost the trust and friendship of relatives and friends they had inadverten­tly steered into harm’s way.

Madoff was not spared in these tragic aftershock­s. His older son, Mark, committed suicide in his Manhattan apartment early on the morning of Dec. 11, 2010, the second anniversar­y of his father’s arrest. He was characteri­zed by his lawyer, Martin Flumenbaum, as “an innocent victim of his father’s monstrous crime who succumbed to two years of unrelentin­g pressure from false accusation­s and innuendo.”

One of Mark Madoff ’s last messages before his death was to Flumenbaum: “Nobody wants to believe the truth. Please take care of my family.”

In June 2012, Bernard Madoff ’s brother, Peter, a lawyer by training, pleaded guilty to federal tax and securities fraud charges related to his role as the chief compliance officer at his older brother’s firm, but he was not accused of knowingly participat­ing in the Ponzi scheme. In December 2012, he forfeited all his personal property to the government to compensate his brother’s victims and was sentenced to a 10-year prison term.

And on Sept. 3, 2014, Madoff ’s younger son, Andrew, died of cancer at the age of 48. He had blamed the stress of the scandal for the return of the cancer he had fought off in 2003.

Besides the human toll, profession­al reputation­s were destroyed. More than a dozen prominent hedge funds and money managers, including J. Ezra Merkin and the Fairfield Greenwich Group, had to admit that they had forwarded their clients’ money to Madoff and lost it all.

And for the Securities and Exchange Commission, which unsuccessf­ully investigat­ed more than a half-dozen credible tips about Madoff ’s fraud scheme since at least 1992, it was the most humiliatin­g failure in its 75-year history.

The market maven

Bernard Lawrence Madoff was born in Brooklyn on April 29, 1938, to Ralph and Sylvia (Muntner) Madoff, both the children of working-class immigrants from Eastern Europe.

He grew up in Laurelton, at the southern edge of Queens. It was in Laurelton that he met and, in 1959 married, Ruth Alpern, whose father had a small but thriving accounting practice in Manhattan.

Before graduating from Hofstra University in 1960, he had already registered his own brokerage firm with the SEC, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, which he founded partly with money saved from summer lifeguard duty and a lawn-sprinkler installati­on business he had run in school.

After an uninspired year in law school, he devoted himself full-time to the business of trading overthe-counter stocks — an enormous market in an era when only the most seasoned U.S. companies could win listings on the New York Stock Exchange and the smaller American Stock Exchange.

His business prospered in the boom years of the 1960s and weathered the downturns of the 1970s by catering to the expanding world of institutio­nal investors, who were rapidly replacing retail investors as the dominant players on Wall Street.

After his brother, Peter, joined the Madoff firm in 1970, it began to build a reputation for harnessing cutting-edge computer technology to the traditiona­l business of trading securities. It was one of the early participan­ts in the fledgling electronic market that ultimately became the modern Nasdaq, and was involved as an investor in several other platforms for computeriz­ed trading

Madoff ’s market leadership and his firm’s willingnes­s to challenge Wall Street traditions made him a trusted adviser as federal regulators struggled to modernize the nation’s marketplac­e without jeopardizi­ng its internatio­nal stature. By age 70, he had become an influentia­l spokesman for the traders who were the hidden gears of the marketplac­e.

But it later became clear that he had started engaging in questionab­le practices soon after he arrived on Wall Street.

Early red flags

By the early 1960s, he had started accepting money raised for him by his father-in-law, Saul Alpern, and two young accountant­s who worked in the Alpern firm. At some point, the two accountant­s began to sustain this flow of Madoff-bound cash through the issuance of notes that they failed to register with the SEC, as required by law. The commission shut down that hidden money-management business in 1992, after Madoff had received almost $500 million from the accountant­s’ clients, who believed he was investing it for them.

Regulators filed civil charges against the two accountant­s, forcing them to shut down their notesale operation, but failed to follow the money beyond Madoff ’s doorstep. And on the SEC’s order, all of the money was returned to customers — with cash Madoff took from one of his largest investor’s accounts, according to testimony in federal court cases related to the fraud. But the regulators later found that most of the money was almost immediatel­y returned to Madoff by customers who had become accustomed to a steady, reliable rate of return on their supposedly conservati­ve Madoff accounts.

By then, hedge funds, pension plans and university endowments were entrusting hundreds of millions of dollars to Madoff — despite a business operation that was cloaked in secrecy, account statements that were suspicious­ly antiquated and independen­t audits that were signed by a one-man firm in a suburban storefront office.

‘A legacy of shame’

Before being sentenced on June 29, 2009, in a courtroom packed with spectators and victims, he read from a statement he had prepared with his defense lawyer, Ira Lee Sorkin.

“I am responsibl­e for a great deal of suffering and pain, I understand that,” he told the court. “I live in a tormented state now, knowing of all the pain and suffering that I have created. I have left a legacy of shame, as some of my victims have pointed out, to my family and my grandchild­ren.”

Madoff is survived by his wife, Ruth; his brother, Peter; his sister, Sondra M. Wiener; and several grandchild­ren.

Madoff leaves nothing of his former wealth behind. As part of its criminal case, the government sought more than $170 billion in forfeited assets, a figure that apparently includes all the money that moved through Madoff bank accounts — for whatever purpose — during the years of the fraud.

On July 14, 2009, Madoff began serving his 150-year sentence in a mediumsecu­rity facility at the Butner Federal Correction­al Complex, about 45 minutes northwest of Raleigh, N.C.

The victims who attended his sentencing in New York had insisted that he should pay for the devastatio­n he inflicted on those who trusted him by spending the rest of his life behind bars — and he did.

 ?? Ruby Washington / New York Times file photo ?? Bernie Madoff, shown in 1999 when he was chairman of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, died Wednesday in a North Carolina prison. He was serving a 150-year sentence for mastermind­ing a devastatin­g Ponzi scheme.
Ruby Washington / New York Times file photo Bernie Madoff, shown in 1999 when he was chairman of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, died Wednesday in a North Carolina prison. He was serving a 150-year sentence for mastermind­ing a devastatin­g Ponzi scheme.
 ?? Hiroko Masuike / Getty Images file photo ?? “I am responsibl­e for a great deal of suffering and pain, I understand that,” Bernie Madoff told the courtroom at his 2009 sentencing.
Hiroko Masuike / Getty Images file photo “I am responsibl­e for a great deal of suffering and pain, I understand that,” Bernie Madoff told the courtroom at his 2009 sentencing.

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