madoff

Sheryl Weinstein, "Madoff’s Other Secret: Love, Money, Bernie, And Me" Author, Claims Affair With Madoff

August 15, 2009

LARRY NEUMEISTER, Associated Press Writer NEW YORK – A new book says that an investor who claims she was devastated by Bernard Madoff’s multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme had a two-decade affair with the disgraced financier. The memoir, “Madoff’s Other Secret: Love, Money, Bernie, and Me,” was written by Sheryl Weinstein, whose relationship with Madoff spanned more than 20 years while both were married, said John Murphy, a spokesman for publisher St. Martin’s Press. It goes on sale Aug. 25. Madoff, 71, is serving 150 years in prison for defrauding investors. Weinstein says she met him at a business meeting when she was chief financial officer for the charitable women’s organization Hadassah, where she had a role in investment decisions. Madoff attorney Ira Sorkin said he hopes the author “was more discreet with her investment obligations than she has allegedly been with her sex life.” An attorney for Madoff’s wife, Ruth Madoff, said his client did not know about the “alleged affair.” The attorney, Peter Chavkin, said the allegations were a powerful reminder to those who claim Ruth Madoff knew about her husband’s massive Ponzi scheme “that there are some things that some spouses — however close they are — do not share with each other.” At Bernard Madoff’s June sentencing, Weinstein was among investors to urge a long prison sentence for the financier, who admitted ripping off thousands of investors for billions of dollars for at least two decades. She said she viewed meeting him 21 years ago “as perhaps the unluckiest day of my life.” Weinstein said her investment losses had forced her to sell her Manhattan home and devastated her, her husband of 37 years, her son, her parents, her in-laws and everyone who depended on them. She called Madoff “that terror, that monster, that horror, that beast … an equal-opportunity destroyer.” In her correspondence with the court, Weinstein made no mention of the affair, though she did write in a request to speak at sentencing that she wanted to address Madoff and the court because “I think the personal connection may be more difficult for him to ignore.” Her husband, Ron Weinstein, said in a June letter to the court that all the money the couple had saved was lost by Madoff and that their marriage was strained. “My wife has been a basket case,” he said, “and we are both very depressed.” The book has drawn fresh attention to Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America. The organization has said its principal investment with Madoff totaled about $33 million, while another $7 million had been entrusted to Madoff after it was donated by a French backer in 1988. Hadassah did not return a telephone call for comment Friday. Stanley Epstein, a Santa Monica, Calif., lawyer married to a Hadassah member, said Hadassah’s treasurer told him after Madoff’s December arrest that the organization had cashed in between $120 million and $130 million from its Madoff accounts over the years. The profits could make the organization a target of those seeking to recover money to be distributed to defrauded investors. By Friday evening, the publicity about Weinstein’s book had pushed its presale ranking on Amazon.com from No. 4,408 eight hours earlier to No. 1,415.

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Madoff’s Finance Chief DiPascali to Be Charged in $65 Billion Ponzi Scheme

August 8, 2009

By David Glovin and David Voreacos Aug. 8 (Bloomberg) — Frank DiPascali , chief financial officer at Bernard Madoff ’s investment advisory business, will be criminally charged by the U.S. for his role in the con man’s $65 billion Ponzi scheme, the biggest in history. DiPascali, 52, will be arraigned at 3 p.m. on Aug. 11 and is expected to plead guilty, Manhattan U.S. Attorney Lev Dassin said in a letter yesterday to U.S. District Judge Richard J. Sullivan . Earlier yesterday, the government released a notice of intent to file criminal charges in a document called an information. In that notice, signed three days ago, prosecutors said DiPascali will waive his right to an indictment. DiPascali has been under investigation by federal prosecutors in New York since Madoff was arrested Dec. 11. By foregoing an indictment, he would give up his right to have his case heard by a grand jury. Prosecutors often use an information when a defendant agrees to plead guilty and cooperate with authorities in exchange for leniency. “It would be reasonable for him to cooperate,” said former federal prosecutor Andrew Hruska . “The evidence against Madoff was strong enough for Madoff to go down without a fight. That would make it very difficult for someone in DiPascali’s position to fight the charges.” Hruska said he understands that DiPascali would have been perfectly placed to understand all aspects of Madoff’s fraud. ‘Key Player’ “He could be extraordinarily helpful to prosecutors and regulators in sorting it out,” Hruska said. “He seems to have been the key player in executing the decisions that Madoff made.” Rachel Silverman , a spokeswoman for DiPascali’s law firm, Bracewell & Giuliani LLP in New York, said the firm wouldn’t comment. Prosecutors often file a notice of information when the defendant is cooperating with the government and has worked out a plea agreement, said former federal prosecutor Steven Peikin . DiPascali is “one of the few people who’s been identified as an insider to the scheme,” Peikin said. “I would think his cooperation would significantly advance the investigation.” Madoff, 71, pleaded guilty in March and was sentenced on June 29 to 150 years in prison for paying earlier clients with money from new investors. The con man’s Manhattan apartment and other luxury items were seized by U.S. Marshals and will be sold to repay victims. Madoff’s wife, Ruth, has been sued by the trustee liquidating her husband’s firm. Madoff’s Subordinates Prosecutors are probing whether Madoff’s subordinates helped him swindle investors. DiPascali would be the first person from Madoff’s firm to be charged, not counting Madoff himself. Madoff, whose guilty plea headed off a jury trial, has not publicly implicated others. Jacob Frenkel , a white-collar criminal defense lawyer who isn’t involved in the case, said he expects to see additional criminal charges filed against other Madoff associates. Madoff’s sons, Andrew and Mark Madoff , ran the proprietary trading operations at Madoff’s firm. They turned their father in to authorities on Dec. 10 after he confessed to them, their attorney, Martin Flumenbaum , has said. Investors have filed lawsuits against funds that invested with Madoff and were wiped out, including Fairfield Greenwich Group and Gabriel Capital LP. The Securities Investor Protection Corp. also filed “clawback” lawsuits against the feeder funds. Fairfield Greenwich is being sued for the $3.5 billion it withdrew before the fraud unraveled. Life Savings Some of Madoff’s thousands of investors lost their life savings. Thierry Magon de La Villehuchet , chief executive officer of Access International Advisors, which managed $3 billion, was driven to suicide because of his firm’s Madoff- related losses, his brother, Bertrand Magon de la Villehuchet, said in January. The charges against DiPascali follow a not-guilty plea from Madoff’s accountant, David Friehling , on July 17. He was accused in a criminal information of securities fraud and investment- adviser fraud and four counts of making false filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. DiPascali, who lives in Bridgewater, New Jersey, submitted a resume to the Bridgewater school board in 2002. He said he joined Madoff’s firm in 1975 and spent five years as assistant to the managing director. He said he worked as director of research and director of options, becoming CFO in 1996. DiPascali was introduced to Madoff Securities in the 1970s by Annette Bongiorno, his next door neighbor in Howard Beach, New York, where the two grew up. Bongiorno worked as Madoff’s personal assistant in the 1980s. The Madoff case is U.S. v. Madoff, 09-cr-213, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan). To contact the reporters on this story: David Glovin in U.S. District Court in New York at dglovin@bloomberg.net ; David Voreacos in New York federal court at dvoreacos@bloomberg.net .

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Madoff Trustee’s Law Firm Will Make $14.7M For Four Months Work

August 7, 2009

Aug. 6 (Bloomberg) — The trustee liquidating Bernard Madoff’s investment company won court approval of a $14.7 million bill for four months work by his law firm, overcoming challenges from victims. The payment to trustee Irving Picard and his firm, Baker & Hostetler LLP, was approved today by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Burton Lifland in New York. Some victims argued that Picard isn’t paying Madoff clients fast enough and is wasting money that should go to them.

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Madoff Trustee Sues Con Man’s Wife Ruth for $44.8 Million in `Clawback’

July 29, 2009

By Erik Larson July 29 (Bloomberg) — The trustee liquidating Bernard Madoff ’s investment advisory business sued the imprisoned con man’s wife, Ruth, for $44.8 million, saying she profited for years from the $65 billion Ponzi scheme. Trustee Irving Picard filed the so-called clawback suit today in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York, arguing that Ruth Madoff’s profit from her husband’s fraud is recoverable under U.S.

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Hotprisonpals.com Gives Madoff Honorary Membership

July 25, 2009

BERNIE Madoff is in for some interesting fan mail. HotPrisonPals.com, a Web site that helps jailbirds hook up with pen pals, has given the Ponzi schemer an honorary membership.

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