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To: Cactus Jack who wrote (156018)12/14/2008 11:46:54 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361688
 
Unbridled greed chips away at last remnants of the American Dream

nydailynews.com

By Mike Lupica
Columnist
The New York Daily News
Monday, December 15th 2008

In a city suddenly lousy with grifters like Bernie Madoff and Marc Dreier, who think they can steal as much as they want in this economy, the old man came from Bay Ridge to the midtown streetcorner that is his office six days a week. He set up his vendor's cart to sell scarves and hats on a cold Sunday in New York.

"I'm a little different than those guys in the papers," the old man, named Don, was saying. "I only try to sell you what you can see."

He's an Army veteran from the 1950s and worked with his MBA in various businesses after the service. But when he tried to retire he couldn't. He missed people and having a job to go to, and then his wife passed away 11 years ago and now he is set up by 8:30 most mornings and stays on his corner until 5.

He was born two years before the 1929 stock market crash and has lived long enough to see the closest thing since. Sunday he stood on one of the most famous shopping avenues in the world - Fifth Ave. - and said what is happening in America has been happening for a long time.

"You can't be surprised by greed in a country of greed," he said, not far from the dazzling Christmas lights. "All people have wanted in this country, for a long time, is more. So they kept saying 'yes' to everything as long as the money kept coming in."

Now almost every day, we pay the check in the city and the country for systemic greed that flourished under the outgoing President and his men - so-called leaders who missed all the warning signs on an economy about to crash the way they missed warnings about planes about to crash into our buildings.

This is the country that George Bush hands over to Barack Obama in a few weeks, one that has lost its way. It is a country where greed has gone unregulated through one presidential administration after another, all the way back to the boom years of the sainted Ronald Reagan.

So here we are, with a fraud like Marc Dreier, a pathetic New York celebrity groupie, accused of defrauding hedge funds out of as much as $400 million. And with Bernie Madoff, once a respected Wall Street name and a founder of Nasdaq, accused of being one of the worst thieves in American history.

"There is no innocent explanation," Madoff is alleged to have said to investigators.

Of course there is! This crazy old man just wanted more, another captain of industry who ought to spend the rest of his life in an orange jumpsuit.

It is a wretched thing to read about Madoff's victims. But when the bottom fell out of the mortgage business and all these banks, we were told again and again that this was all the fault of poor people who overextended themselves to buy houses they could not afford; that somehow the poor sunk the economy and all these huge companies by themselves.

But these things never happen in a vacuum, not with bums like Madoff, allowed to run wild in a world of money without nearly enough transparency or regulation, until it is too late.

Maybe it can begin to change for the better under a new President. It was never going to change under George W. Bush, whose mission has always been to redistribute the wealth in a way that made rich Americans much, much richer.

"A country run by amateurs," the street vendor Don said Sunday.

There is an old line from Fay Vincent, the baseball commissioner who suspended George Steinbrenner for conspiring with a known gambler, Howie Spira. Steinbrenner paid Spira to get some dirt on Dave Winfield, for whom Steinbrenner had no use, and Vincent caught him doing that and kicked him out of the game.

Vincent said at the time that Steinbrenner had heard no moral alarm because "none sounded."

There was no moral alarm for Bernie Madoff as he systematically ruined fortunes and pension funds, and ultimately lives, and didn't get stopped until now. He is the biggest thief we know about, but only for now, because he is caught. You wonder how many more like him end up in orange jumpsuits before this is over.

Madoff was a huge figure on the grand, mythical place known as "The Street." But on another street yesterday, on his own corner of Fifth Ave., the old vendor from Bay Ridge shook his head.

"Fifty billion dollars," he said. "Everybody kept saying 'yes' to this guy Madoff until the law told him 'no.'"



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (156018)12/15/2008 8:54:13 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361688
 
Madoff Said to Use Unregistered Side-Unit for Clients (Update1)

By David Scheer and David Glovin

Dec. 15 (Bloomberg) -- Federal investigators working through the weekend to unravel Bernard Madoff’s alleged $50 billion Ponzi scheme found evidence he ran an unregistered money-management business alongside his firm’s brokerage and investment-advisory subsidiaries, two people with knowledge of the inquiry said.

Clients of the undisclosed unit may have included hedge funds, according to the people, who declined to be identified or to name the funds because the probe isn’t public. Investigators from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission are looking for signs that others participated in the alleged fraud and are examining why Madoff’s wife’s name appeared on documents linked to transactions under scrutiny, the people said. His wife, Ruth Madoff, has not been accused of any wrongdoing.

Ira “Ike” Sorkin, a lawyer at Dickstein Shapiro LLP in New York representing Madoff, didn’t reply to a phone call and e-mail seeking comment. Calls to residences listed in the Madoffs’ names in Manhattan, Montauk, New York, and Palm Beach, Florida, weren’t answered. John Heine, an SEC spokesman, declined to comment.

Sorkin said on Dec. 13 that the situation was “a tragedy.”

More than a dozen SEC inspectors have been working around the clock examining records at Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC in New York after his sons told authorities Dec. 10 he’d confessed to orchestrating a Ponzi scheme with more than $50 billion in losses, the biggest in history. People with knowledge of the probe who initially said they suspected the loss estimate was too high now say it may be roughly accurate.

Wilpon, BNP Paribas

The $50 billion figure may reflect the amounts of money clients were told they had in their accounts at the firm, not the amounts they originally invested, two of the people said. Customers who believed they had amassed investment gains over time may have been misled, the people said.

Clients facing losses range from New York Mets owner Fred Wilpon’s Sterling Equities Inc. to hedge funds such as Fairfield Sentry Ltd. The alleged scam has ensnared more than 25 companies around the world, including some of the biggest financial-services firms such as BNP Paribas SA in Paris and Nomura Holdings Inc. in Tokyo, which have said they may lose money because of trading or lending tied to Madoff’s firm. In all, companies, individuals and foundations have disclosed about $24 billion of investments with Madoff, according to data compiled Bloomberg and media reports.

Investigators are still trying to figure out where customers’ money went. Madoff, 70, told his sons last week he had as much as $300 million left, according to an SEC lawsuit filed in federal court in Manhattan. The agency is looking for additional money that may be recovered for victims, two people said. In a regulatory filing in January, Madoff’s firm listed $17 billion in assets under management.

The 17th Floor

Details of the side-business that the SEC is scrutinizing -- including how much client money it held, who besides Madoff may have been involved in it, and how it was kept separate from the firm’s registered investment-advisory unit -- couldn’t be determined.

Madoff kept his firm’s financial statements under lock and key and was “cryptic” about its investment-advisory activities when discussing them with other employees, the SEC said in its complaint.

The entire advisory business was a mystery to most staff members, said two firm employees who declined to be identified, citing concern about being drawn into the probe. Madoff’s offices on Third Avenue in midtown Manhattan extended over several floors, with market-making and proprietary trading units on the 19th floor, and back-office functions on the 18th floor, the employees said. Madoff’s advisory business was housed on the 17th floor.

While traffic flowed between the 18th and 19th floors, the 17th floor wasn’t linked to the other floors and there was virtually no interaction between the groups, according to the employees.

In the Dark

Madoff’s sons, who ran the market-making and proprietary units, told employees that their father kept them in the dark about the advisory unit, the employees said. While Madoff seldom appeared on the 18th and 19th floors during the workday, he was known to inspect during the evening for sloppy desks or window shades that weren’t fully drawn, one of the employees said.

The only person the employee recalled seeing Madoff consult with on the 17th floor was an executive known by his first name, Frank.

Reached by phone at home, Madoff official Frank DiPascali referred calls to his lawyer, Marc Mukasey, a former federal prosecutor now at Bracewell & Giuliani in New York. Mukasey declined to comment.

In court documents, U.S. criminal prosecutors and the SEC said Madoff confessed that his advisory business, which catered to rich people and institutional investors as well as hedge funds, was “all just one big lie.” The business had been insolvent for years, according to the SEC’s account of his statement.

SIPC Steps In

He made the admissions to his sons, Mark and Andrew, who turned him in to U.S. authorities, according to Martin Flumenbaum, a lawyer at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP in New York who represents the brothers.

Madoff was arrested Dec. 11 and charged at federal court in Manhattan with a single count of securities fraud. He was released that day on a $10 million bond guaranteed by his wife and secured by his Manhattan apartment. A day later, a federal court froze the firm’s assets and appointed Lee Richards, an attorney at Richards Kibbe & Orbe LLP in New York, as a receiver.

The fate of Madoff’s brokerage customers also remains undetermined. The Securities Investor Protection Corp., which insures brokerages, plans to take over Madoff’s operation as early as today, three people said. The Washington-based SIPC oversees transfers of client accounts, including securities and cash, when a firm fails.

Brokerage Customers

“We are aware of the situation,” said SIPC President Stephen Harbeck. “Our long-standing policy is not to comment until we do something.”

Investigators haven’t indicated what losses, if any, brokerage customers may have suffered. To prevent losses, securities firms are supposed to keep SIPC-insured accounts isolated from the company’s own accounts. Though the SIPC provides insurance of up to $500,000 per client for lost assets, it doesn’t protect against investment losses.

To contact the reporters on this story: David Scheer in New York at dscheer@bloomberg.net; David Glovin in U.S. District Court in New York at dglovin@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: December 15, 2008 03:59 EST



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (156018)12/15/2008 9:22:47 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361688
 
Madoff Auditor Under Investigation by New York State Prosecutor

By Karen Freifeld

Dec. 15 (Bloomberg) -- The auditor for Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, whose namesake was charged in a $50 billion Ponzi scheme last week, is under investigation by the district attorney in New York’s Rockland County, a northern suburb of New York City.

The New City, New York, auditing firm Friehling & Horowitz signed off on the annual financial statement of Madoff’s Manhattan-based investment advisory business through Oct. 31, 2006, according to a copy obtained by Bloomberg News.

Madoff was charged by federal prosecutors in Manhattan and sued by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Dec. 11. He told senior employees that the firm was insolvent and “had been for years,” prosecutors said in the criminal complaint. David Friehling, whose name is on the door to the store-front accounting office, hasn’t been charged.

“We’re trying to determine if there have been any state crimes here,” Rockland County District Attorney Thomas Zugibe said in a telephone interview yesterday. “When you have a key player like that operating in your county, you have to look.”

Friehling didn’t return calls for comment.

Zugibe said, among other things, he was probing to see whether any other Rockland-based businesses or other organizations might be affected.

“The implication is pretty broad,” Zugibe said.

Friehling is on the board of the JCC Rockland, a Jewish center in the county. He also is a past-president and a current board member of the Rockland chapter of the New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants.

Hedge Fund Adviser

Hedge fund investment adviser Aksia LLC warned clients last year not to put their money with Madoff after learning of “red flags” at his company, including that its books were audited by a three-person accounting firm.

Friehling & Horowitz included one partner in his late 70s who lives in Florida, a secretary, and one active accountant, Aksia said.

The copy of the four-page annual financial statement, dated Dec. 18, 2006, attested that the financial statements of Madoff’s securities firm were “in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States.”

The financial analysis said Madoff Securities had $1.3 billion in assets, including $711 million in marketable securities and $67 million in U.S. debt. Members’ equity, the firm’s net worth, was $604 million, according to the document.

The firm operates from a storefront office in the Georgetown Office Plaza in New City, New York, sandwiched between a pediatrician’s office and another medical office.

Leslie Cousar, who works in a nearby office, said on Dec. 12 that the man who comes to the auditor’s office does so for 10-to- 15 minute periods and leaves. She said he drives a Lexus and doesn’t dress in business attire.

The case is U.S. v. Madoff, 08-MAG-02735, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

To contact the reporter on this story: Karen Freifeld in New York state Supreme Court at kfreifeld@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: December 15, 2008 00:01 EST



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (156018)12/17/2008 7:08:40 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361688
 
Bernie Madoff: ‘In Today’s Regulatory Environment, It’s Virtually Impossible to Violate Rules’

nymag.com

Madoff relied on 'irrational euphoria'

news.bbc.co.uk



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (156018)12/17/2008 9:32:01 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361688
 
Madoff’s Indirect Investors May Recover Some Money, Lawyer Says

By Alexis Leondis

Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Indirect investors who got ensnarled in Bernard Madoff’s alleged $50 billion Ponzi scheme have a better chance of recovering their money than direct investors, says a securities-arbitration lawyer.

Investors who went through a third-party such as a hedge fund or a broker can turn to a lawsuit or arbitration, said Jacob Zamansky, a securities-arbitration attorney based in New York.

“Since these third parties didn’t do the appropriate due diligence before turning their clients’ money over to Madoff’s firm, they are liable,” according to Zamansky, who said he has been retained by about 12 clients who invested directly or indirectly with Madoff.

“Those third parties have ‘deeper pockets,’ so there’s a good possibility investors will get a substantial portion, if not all of their money returned,” Zamansky said.

Madoff was arrested Dec. 11 after he told his two sons that clients of his New York-based investment-advisory firm lost $50 billion in a “giant Ponzi scheme,” according to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

For direct investors, “filing a lawsuit is throwing money out the window in legal fees,” said James Cox, a securities law professor at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.

“By the time they collect all of Madoff’s assets and liquidate them, providing there are no ‘clawbacks,’ there will probably just be enough to pay the attorneys’ fees,” said Cox. A so-called clawback is when money that has been distributed is reclaimed to recover proceeds for other investors.

The Securities Investor Protection Corp., a government- sponsored group that protects clients when brokerages fail, is liquidating Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, according to the Washington-based organization.

‘Utterly Unreliable’

It will take six months to sort out Madoff’s records, said Stephen Harbeck, president of SIPC, on Bloomberg Television. Harbeck described Madoff’s records as “utterly unreliable.”

“There are some assets, but I have no idea what the relationships of the assets available are to the claims against them,” Harbeck said.

SIPC insures as much as $500,000 per customer account for money that is stolen, not lost because of declining investments. According to its Web site, SIPC has a reserve of slightly more than $1 billion.

Those who invested with Madoff through his investment advisory firm, which he allegedly used to run the Ponzi scheme, won’t be covered by SIPC, said Stuart Meissner, a former securities regulator who is now an investor lawyer based in New York. Only direct investors in Madoff’s brokerage firm will be covered, he said.

‘Gray Area’

If the securities appearing on statements were fictitious and not in customers’ accounts, “coverage becomes a gray area,” said Meissner.

If SIPC makes an insurance payout, it may take up to two years for investors to get the distribution, Meissner said.

Investors also may have to wait several years for a trustee to sell off the assets or let them mature before receiving a pro- rata distribution, said Mercer Bullard, a University of Mississippi law professor and former mutual-fund attorney at the SEC.

Those who closed their accounts with Madoff within the last year “need to be aware that there could be a clawback,” Zamansky said.

While authorities unscramble the Madoff case, both indirect and direct investors need to gather all documents to prove their claims, said the securities lawyers and law professors.

Offering Memorandum

The most important document for investors who used a hedge fund as a third party is the offering memorandum that lists the rules under which the fund operates, said Bullard, the University of Mississippi law professor. Peripheral documents including e- mails and marketing materials from firm employees are also helpful for proving claims, Bullard said.

Zamansky recommended gathering copies of checks, wire transfers and monthly or annual statements reflecting investments.

The only consolation for some who invested with Madoff may be a tax write-off because losses due to theft can usually be deducted.

“There probably isn’t any redress in all this except the delight at having a deduction on your tax return,” Cox said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Alexis Leondis in New York aleondis@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: December 16, 2008 14:59 EST



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (156018)12/17/2008 6:53:21 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361688
 
Madoff and Hedge Fund Regulation

lawprofessors.typepad.com

The Madoff fraud has reporters seeking comments from my colleagues in the academy on the "failure of the system" and many -- most-- of my colleagues who have pushed for increased regulation for their entire professional careers are more than willing to use the fraud to push their old causes. "The Madoff fraud proves...... that the current SEC is incompetent.....that hedge funds need regulation.....that capitalism is a failure...that Bush is a failure... that Sarbanes Oxley did not go far enough.... [fill in the blank]." In truth it proves none of the above. Regulation can never stop all major frauds. Regulation can force frauds to be more difficult to accomplish and can penalize those who are discovered. Madoff co-oped an auditing company and filed, voluntarily, disclosure forms with the SEC under the SEC's hedge fund disclosure rules. Danger signs were 1) the family structure, 2) the smooth returns in turbulent times, 3) the use of an unknown audit firm; and 4) the difficulty of actually doing the advertised trading strategy given the low volume in some of the options markets that the fund claimed to use very heavily. Of the signs, number 4) is the most telling. The market has responded. Fund of funds (FOFs) that did not check out Madoff are suffering massive redemption's. Fund redemption's are the investors extra-legal protection in the hedge fund business. To raise funds the hedge funds lowered "lock-in" barriers, a major concession to investors.

The toxic byproduct from our economic downturn will be, as in this case, over-regulation as frustrated central planner types push their years old philosophy on a now pliant federal government. As Rahm has said, in effect, "We should not waste a good crisis."

December 16, 2008 |



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (156018)12/23/2008 2:35:05 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361688
 
Thacher Proffitt, 160-Year-Old Law Firm, to Close (Update2)

By Lindsay Fortado

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Thacher Proffitt & Wood, a 160-year- old New York-based law firm, will close down after the subprime crisis slashed demand for its structured-finance practice and more than half of its attorneys left for a competitor.

Thacher Proffitt will wind down operations next year after its planning committee failed to reach a merger agreement with an unidentified firm over the past six months, according to a company statement yesterday. It is the fourth U.S. law firm to announce plans to close this year.

“Although many avenues for a merger were explored, in the current economic environment it became apparent to the committee that a merger could not be executed,” Thacher Proffitt said in the statement. “In light of severe reductions in revenue, it became clear that Thacher Proffitt would not have the financial resources to continue business operations.”

Dozens of law firms have cut lawyers and staff in the past year, mainly in structured finance and real estate. Thelen, a San Francisco firm that was, like Thacher Proffitt, focused on structured finance, has shut down. Heller Ehrman, a 118-year-old firm that once boasted about 700 lawyers, also collapsed from a lack of business.

A group of about 100 Thacher Proffitt lawyers, including 40 partners, will join Chicago-based Sonnenschein, Nath & Rosenthal on Jan. 1, bringing that firm’s total number of lawyers to about 800, Sonnenschein said in a statement. They include Paul Tvetenstrand, Thacher Proffitt’s managing partner, and Robert McCarthy, the firm’s chairman of the planning committee.

195 Lawyers

Thacher Proffitt, which had about 195 lawyers before the departures, put up for sublease all five floors of its headquarters during the past six months. The firm, which signed a 15-year lease in November 2002, had been among the first companies to take space at the World Financial Center in Manhattan following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

In October, the firm closed its White Plains, New York, office. The firm has faced a decline in business since the subprime-mortgage market began to collapse, halting work in structured finance and real estate, two of its largest practices. It has cut jobs in those two areas.

“This is an extraordinary move for our clients,” McCarthy said yesterday in Sonnenschein’s statement. “With financial markets evolving and governments playing a greater role in the global economy, our move to Sonnenschein gives us the edge to excel with the industry leaders we serve.”

Founded in 1848

Thacher Proffitt, founded in 1848 at 29 Wall Street, developed a specialty in mortgage securities, real estate and banking in the 1970s, according to its Web site. Its clients have included the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., Deutsche Bank AG and Bank of New York Co.

“The firm helped develop many of the standard financial tools of the mortgage securities market and has impacted the field such that the standard form of mortgage loan participation agreement is still known to Wall Street as the ‘TP & W form,’ ” Thacher Proffitt said on its site.

Thacher Proffitt had as many as 350 lawyers before the subprime crisis. The head of the its litigation practice, Richard Hans, and the head of its white-collar crime and government investigations practice, Patrick Smith, left to join DLA Piper, DLA Piper said yesterday.

Some Thacher Proffitt lawyers who are moving to Sonnenschein were hired by the U.S. Treasury Department on Dec. 10 to assist in investing in entities by purchasing asset-backed securities under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act, according to a statement by the department last week.

‘Tumult’ in Markets

Sonnenschein is also facing slowing demand for legal services. The firm has fired 62 lawyers and about 175 staff since May due to “tumult in the financial markets” and its effect on clients, according to a memo Chairman Elliott Portnoy sent to attorneys in October. The new hires will double the size of the firm’s New York office.

New York-based Dreier became the third large law firm to close down this year. It filed for bankruptcy protection after its founder was jailed and accused of cheating hedge funds out of more than $100 million.

Firms that cut jobs because of the economy include New York’s Dewey & LeBoeuf; Proskauer Rose; White & Case; Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft; San Francisco’s Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe; and Chicago’s Mayer Brown and Katten Muchin Rosenman.

Thacher Proffitt had revenue of $194.5 million in 2007, up 1.6 percent from 2006, according to the American Lawyer, a trade publication. Partners made $1 million on average last year, a 22 percent drop from the previous year.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lindsay Fortado in New York at lfortado@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: December 23, 2008 13:25 EST