To: Rock_nj who wrote (47239 ) 12/13/2008 1:14:27 AM From: stockman_scott 1 Recommendation Respond to of 57684 Fraud suspect's friends shocked, investors fearful _______________________________________________________________ The assets of Bernard Madoff's New York investment company were frozen South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com Staff and wire reports December 13, 2008 They had known him for years as a golf partner, a family friend. Some were neighbors or fellow members of Palm Beach Country Club and other elite social cliques in South Florida. Many had begun investing with 70-year-old Bernard L. Madoff decades ago, often after being referred by a friend or relative who had known the Wall Street veteran even longer. Those investors were scrambling Friday to learn whether they had been wiped out by what prosecutors described as a multibillion dollar Ponzi scheme. The assets of Madoff's New York investment company were frozen Friday in a deal with federal regulators and a receiver was appointed to manage the firm's financial affairs. Madoff estimates he lost as much as $50 billion over many years, according to the criminal complaint. If true, it could be one of the largest fraud schemes in Wall Street history. Madoff has strong ties to Palm Beach County. His wife, Ruth, is listed as the sole owner of a home in Palm Beach at 410 N. Lake Way, along the Intracoastal Waterway. She bought it in 1994 for $3.8 million, and it now is appraised at $9.4 million, property records show. Bernard Madoff also docks a 55-foot boat here named Bull. "I was surprised," famed developer Donald Trump, a part-time Palm Beacher who knew of Madoff, said in a brief telephone interview Friday with the Sun Sentinel. "He was a pretty respected guy, but he turned out to be a whack job." Trump said Madoff's brother belonged to Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach and Trump thought Madoff also was a member. Madoff also reportedly belonged to the Boca Rio Golf Club. The manager of the Boca Raton club could not be reached for comment Friday. Conservative radio commentator Rush Limbaugh said on the air Friday that Madoff was his neighbor in Palm Beach. There had been some warnings: Financial consultants had been suspicious for years about his astounding run of success. They couldn't figure out how he managed to produce steady returns, month after month, even when everyone else was losing money — and leave almost no footprint while moving billions of dollars in and out of the markets. "People would come to me with their statements, and I couldn't make heads or tails of them," said Charles Gradante, co-founder of the Hennessee Group and adviser to hedge fund investors. "He only had five down months since 1996," Gradante said. "There's no strategy in the world that can generate that kind of performance. But when people would come to him and say, 'How did I make money this month?' he didn't like it. He would get upset with people who probed too much." The roster of alleged victims included Sterling Equities, co-founded by New York Mets owner Fred Wilpon, as well as a long list of Madoff's friends, neighbors and country club associates. Investor Lawrence Velvel, dean of the Massachusetts School of Law, said he was introduced to Madoff by a friend whose late mother began investing with him decades ago after being impressed by the fancy cars of friends who had made a fortune with him. He described a powerful word-of-mouth allure, where one friend after another recommended Madoff as a sure thing, someone who took on new clients only reluctantly and as a favor. "I was told there was a small number of people who practically begged him to let them keep their money with him," Velvel said. "Older people living off their savings. These kinds of people and others practically begged him." Brad Friedman, an attorney representing several people who had invested at least $1 million with Madoff, said most had been with him for decades as well. "They know him socially, through the Palm Beach Country Club or the Glen Oaks Country Club [on Long Island]. They played golf with him," Friedman said. -Staff Writer Paul Owers and Staff Researcher Gail Bulfin contributed to this story from the Associated Press. Copyright © 2008, South Florida Sun-Sentinel