Madoff Victims Set To Bank $7.2bn Windfall

EnglishLady

Veteran Expediter
Sky News Dec 18

The estate of a billionaire investor in Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme has agreed to forfeit $7.2bn to victims of the fraud


The estate of a billionaire investor in Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme has agreed to forfeit $7.2bn to victims of the fraud.



The money from Jeffry Picower's estate "is the largest forfeiture recovery in US history" and takes the total recovered to $9.8bn.

Federal prosecutor Preet Bharara said: "The entire $7.2bn will be distributed to the victims. We expect to distribute the money in the new year."

Court-appointed trustee Irving Picard is clawing back money from Madoff family members and investors who profited from the decades-long pyramid scheme - the biggest in Wall Street history.

Mr Picower, who made billions as one of Madoff's top investors, died in October 2009 of a heart attack in his Florida swimming pool.
His widow, Barbara Picower, said: "It is a great tragedy that my husband Jeffry's sudden and untimely death last fall prevented him from seeing the timely and full restoration of his reputation for honesty, integrity and professional achievement.

"He was committed to overcoming the devastation resulting from Bernard Madoff's fraud by reaching a fair and generous settlement with Mr Picard."

Madoff, serving a 150-year prison sentence, was arrested in December 2008 and pleaded guilty to running a Ponzi scheme that Mr Picard has estimated lost some $20bn dollars of investors' money.

"The importance of this settlement cannot be overstated, as it shows significant progress in our efforts to assemble the largest customer fund possible," Mr Picard said.

"This agreement puts the best interests of the Madoff customers first, is fair and equitable, and avoids time-consuming litigation," David Sheehan, a lawyer with the trustee, said.

Picower died without having been charged with complicity in Madoff's scheme. But he had an extraordinarily close relationship with Madoff from at least the 1970s, officials say.

During that relationship, Picower withdrew just over $7.2bn in profits from the Madoff investment operation.

The settlement requires his widow to give up that fortune, but "contains no finding or admission of fault against Picower", the prosecutor's office said.

Previously $2.6bn had been recouped partly through confiscation of Madoff family properties and an auction of personal belongings.

Madoff's family, which spent decades living in luxury as a result of Bernard Madoff's vast theft, was struck by tragedy this month when one of his two sons committed suicide.

Mark Madoff, 46, hanged himself in his Manhattan apartment on the second anniversary of his father's arrest.
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
You know Sue, I take an entirely different approach to this issue and one people really think I'm full of it but I can't feel sorry for a lot of the 'victims' of this guy because it was greed that drove them to make the investments in the first place.

Most of them knew there was a risk to any investments, a lot of them were not what you would call occasional investors. The problem with the media and the public in general is they forget that the greed part in all of this, Madoff was greedy, his partners and family but so were the investors who saw great gains and didn't question them when they know that his performance was way way above the average.
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
I am with Greg on this...all investments are a risk, if you are making it big over and above the norm, well chances are it ain't because the guy you are paying to make your investments is the best thing to come along since sliced bread...he is a crock...so whining when it all falls down is BS...just as people that pay into the "company pension plans" and get screwed when the company fails....pension investment is a risk that you take, you can make out or lose..."stuff happens"....
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
That's why Ponzi schemes work, because whoever is running it has a (usually) lengthy track record, with people you personally know, who has made a lot of money for the investors. The more you check it out, the less risk there appears to be. People are just looking for a safe place to invest their money and make a decent return. A lot of people made a lot of money with Madoff. Ponzi schemes are a very safe place to invest... right up to the point where you find out it's a Ponzi scheme. Then, not so much.
 
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