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Pious Perverts See other Pious Perverts Articles Title: The Picower Madoff settlement: A $7.2 Billion Whitewash John Graham On Friday the astonishing news broke that the estate of Jeffrey M. Picower had agreed to cough up $7.2 billion to the liquidator of the Bernard Madoff fraud and the Federal Government. (See Zachary A. Goldfarb, Madoff investors widow to return money, The Washington Post, Dec. 18, 2010.) This news was astonishing because the amount said to be the largest single forfeiture in American judicial history represents a considerable 35% of the amount thought to have been paid into the Madoff Ponzi scheme, raising the prospect of material compensation to some of the victims. And also because the Picower lawyer had been freely telling the press earlier this year he expected to settle for only $2 billion. All apparently was not well on the Picower legal front in 2010. What was not astonishing was the rush to present what was in fact proof that Picower was a huge looter of the Madoff victims as evidence of noblesse oblige on the part of his widow, and to cover up what actually happened. CNN reports that In our essay Is the Madoff Scandal Paradigmatic?, Kevin MacDonald and I asserted This last point is now proving true. The Washington Post reports fulsome praise: and allows Picowers widow (Jeffrey Picower himself had the good taste to die in October 2009) to strike a saintly pose: I am deeply saddened by the tragic impact it continues to have on the lives of its victims. It is my hope that this settlement will ease that suffering. (Why did it take Barbara Picower two years to reach this conclusion?) Contemptibly, Trustee Irving Picard folded, saying This involves an incredible recantation of the facts laid out in his May 2009 suit, summarized by Propublica: (Subsequently Propublica raised its estimate of the Picower take to an apparently accurate $7.2 billion.) There was worse. Erin Arvedlunds book recounts (pp. 236-7): By the end of April
Picowers account showed a value of $164 million a gain of $39 million, or a return of more than 30 percent, in less than two weeks trading. The reason for this massive gain [was] fifty-seven purported purchases of securities between January 10 and January 24, 2006, almost three months before the account was opened or funded. The Wall Street Journals account, Widow to Return $7.2 Billion by Michael Rothfeld and Chad Bray (Dec. 18, 2009), reports Picard as saying we have arrived at a business solution instead. The article quotes Mrs. Picower crowing: In reality, even after parting with $7.2 Billion, the Picowers have benefited hugely from their Madoff relationship. Jeffrey Picower was not a vegetating retiree but an extremely active investor. The WSJ reports: The Financial Times account, Picower Left Legacy of Praise and Scrutiny by Justin Baer, Kara Scannell and Shannon Bond (Dec. 17 2010), reveals Picower Reid Nagle, Mr Boeskys chief financial officer, considered Picower one of the most mysterious investors, according to the book. Nagle had no idea where Picowers money came from
At the time of his death, Picowers Goldman account held $4.5bn in unrealised gains, including $2.2bn in Apple stock. The Trustee in this settlement has permitted the Picower estate to keep the fruits of a huge interest-free margin loan to this apparently very astute investor, as well as tolerated the pretence of innocence. There are a large number of Madoff victims who unknowingly became beneficiaries of the fraud, because the passage of time and the effect of the alleged compounding of the accounts allowed them to withdraw more than they invested. To these the Trustee has been merciless. As example has been Hadassah. The Jerusalem Post has reported The organization, which began investing with Bernard Madoff Securities in 1988 with a $7 million gift, deposited a total of $40 million in its Madoff accounts, and by April 2007 had withdrawn $137 million. The last account statement showed approximately $90 million at the time the fraud was discovered. (Hadassah to pay back $45 million of Madoff gains, Dec. 10, 2010) The Picower estate is being allowed to masquerade as one of these unfortunates. Somewhat overshadowed by the Picower development has been the news that the Carl Shapiro family settled with the Trustee. (See Carl Shapiro, family agree to return $625m in Madoff funds (Boston.com, Dec. 7, 2010). This transforms the image of the 97-year old Shapiro, who has cut a great figure as a Massachusetts philanthropist for 40 years. Formerly he has appeared as one of Madoffs most piquant victims, grubstaking the young Madoffs brokerage career with a $100,000 account in 1960 (Kirtzman, p. 43) and putting $250 million back into the firm at Madoffs urgent request in the closing days, bringing the family exposure up to $545 Million (Arvedlund, p. 264) . But the fact that the Shapiros were forced to disgorge $625 mm of funds from other accounts suggests the Trustee had something deadly on them. Carl Shapiro Could Still Go To Jail Over Madoff Ponzi by Nathan Vardi, in Forbes (Dec. 7, 2010) claims this is in excess of Shapiro and his wifes net worth which I doubt but suggests the massive scale of the transfers. I also doubt we will see prosecutions, with the easy excuses of age and charitable activity to hand. Vardi intelligently notes that This explains why the large beneficiaries had any investment in Madoff, previously a puzzling point. Shapiros last $250 million could well have been an attempt to preserve the oasis. Bernie Madoff was not a lone wolf. In fact, to coin a phrase, the fraud appears to have been a Jewish conspiracy. One which, on the evidence of the Picower settlement, the authorities continue to have no intention of investigating.
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Victims Cheer Tough Sentence; Judge Slams Financier for Stonewalling Investigators; True Size of Losses Still a Mystery
Bernard Madoff, the self-confessed author of the biggest financial swindle in history, was sentenced to the maximum 150 years behind bars for what his judge called an extraordinarily evil fraud that shook the nations faith in its financial and legal systems and took a staggering toll on rich and poor alike. The landmark sentence, one of the stiffest ever given for a white-collar crime, came just six months after Mr. Madoff, a pioneer on Wall Street, allegedly told his sons that his entire business was a massive Ponzi scheme. The penalty sparked a burst of applause in a courtroom packed with victims of the fraud.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124604151653862301.html
Bernard Lawrence Bernie Madoff (pronounced /ÈmejdRf/; born April 29, 1938) is an American former financier and convicted felon. Madoff, who served as a non-executive chairman of the NASDAQ stock exchange, pled guilty to an 11-count criminal complaint, admitting to defrauding thousands of investors of billions of dollars and was convicted of operating a Ponzi scheme that has been called the largest investor fraud ever committed by a single person.[3][4] Federal prosecutors estimated client losses, which included fabricated gains, of almost $65 billion.[5] On June 29, 2009, he was sentenced to 150 years in prison, the maximum allowed.[6][7] As there is no parole in the federal correctional system, it was tantamount to a life sentence. Madoff founded the Wall Street firm Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC in 1960, and was its chairman until his arrest on December 11, 2008.[8][9] The firm was one of the top market maker businesses on Wall Street,[10] which bypassed specialist firms, by directly executing orders over the counter from retail brokers.[11] He was said to have confessed to his sons first on December 10, 2008, that the asset management arm of his firm was a giant Ponzi schemeas he put it, one big lie. [12] They then passed this information to authorities.[13][14] The following day, Federal Bureau of Investigation agents arrested Madoff and charged him with one count of securities fraud. The SEC conducted several investigations into Madoffs business practices since 1999, which critics contend were incompetently handled.[10]
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