USA TODAY International Edition

Bernie Madoff, Ponzi mastermind, dies in prison

Financier swindled thousands of clients out of billions in investment­s over decades.

- Kevin McCoy and Nathan Bomey

NEW YORK – Bernie Madoff, the financier who pleaded guilty to orchestrat­ing the largest Ponzi scheme in history, died Wednesday in federal prison.

The federal Bureau of Prisons confirmed that Madoff, 82, died of natural causes early Wednesday. Bureau of Prisons spokeswoma­n Kristie Breshears said Madoff ’ s family was notified of his passing at the agency’s medical facility in Butner, North Carolina.

Madoff admitted in 2009 to swindling thousands of clients out of billions of dollars in investment­s over decades. They reportedly included the likes of baseball legend Sandy Koufax, Hollywood titan Jeffrey Katzenberg, actor Kevin Bacon and actor John Malkovich.

“His life has ended, but his larcenous legacy has been indelibly etched in investment lore,” said Sam Stovall,

author of “The Seven Rules of Wall Street” and chief investment strategist at CFRA Research.

A court- appointed trustee has recovered more than $ 13 billion of an estimated $ 17.5 billion that investors put into Madoff ’ s business. At the time of Madoff ’ s arrest, fake account statements were telling clients they had holdings worth $ 60 billion.

Madoff, a former Nasdaq stock market chairman from New York City, ran a decadeslon­g scam that gave celebritie­s, charities, financial funds and ordinary investors lucrative, eerily steady returns on their investment­s.

Income poured in, making Madoff and his family rich. His upscale lifestyle included a Manhattan condo, an oceanfront home in Montauk, New York, on Long Island’s East End, a vacation home on Nantucket in Massachuse­tts, and a three- bedroom vacation apartment in the south of France.

But Madoff mastermind­ed a classic Ponzi scheme, one in which money from more recent investors went to pay earlier investors.

The scam collapsed in December 2008, when Madoff ’ s businesses could not cover the growing withdrawal requests from investors who sought money amid the Great Recession.

For many of those who’d previously trusted and even revered Madoff, the collapse wiped out their life savings and retirement plans. Some had to seek new jobs or move in with friends and relatives.

For Madoff, the beginning of the end came when he confessed the truth to his sons, Mark and Andrew. They notified federal authoritie­s, who arrested Madoff.

He pleaded guilty in 2009 and insisted that he alone ran the Ponzi scheme and mastermind­ed decades of lies. Federal judge Denny Chin sentenced him to 150 years in prison, a true lifetime term more typical of the sentences imposed on the worst mobsters and violent criminals.

“One hundred and fifty years made me feel really good that for the first time, the government came down on our side and did the right thing,” said Michael DeVita, a Madoff investor from Chalfont, Pennsylvan­ia, after Chin handed down the sentence.

Five former Madoff employees were convicted in 2014 on charges of aiding the massive scam. In that case, a sixth former employee served as the government’s chief witness after confessing his own involvemen­t.

Madoff spent most of his sentence at a federal prison and medical center in Butner, North Carolina, as inmate register number 61727- 054. His fellow inmates included the late Sheik Omar Abdel- Rahman, who was convicted in a 1990s plot to bomb the World Trade Center and New York City landmarks.

By early 2020, Madoff was confined to a wheelchair. He was suffering shortness of breath that required him to be hooked up to oxygen at night. And he had cardiovasc­ular disease, according to his attorney, Brandon Sample.

Madoff’ s lawyers filed court papers last year to try to get him released from prison in the COVID- 19 pandemic, saying he had suffered from end- stage renal disease and other chronic medical conditions. The request was denied.

Madoff was admitted to a comfort care unit at the prison in July 2019. After initially refusing dialysis, the blood- filtering procedure commonly prescribed for kidney- failure patients, he agreed to start the treatment in December, the court filing said.

While stressing that Madoff doesn’t dispute “the severity of his crimes” or “seek to minimize the suffering of his victims,” Sample argued the convicted scammer’s conditions met the guidelines for compassion­ate release.

The court said no.

 ?? DAVID KARP/ AP ?? Former financier Bernie Madoff leaves federal court in Manhattan in 2009. Madoff, who orchestrat­ed the largest Ponzi scheme in history, died in prison on Wednesday.
DAVID KARP/ AP Former financier Bernie Madoff leaves federal court in Manhattan in 2009. Madoff, who orchestrat­ed the largest Ponzi scheme in history, died in prison on Wednesday.

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