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To: Tom Clarke who wrote (284901)12/20/2008 9:45:57 AM
From: Ruffian  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793966
 
SPITZ GOT $CREWED BY BERNIE
FAMILY LOST MILLIONS

Last updated: 5:55 am
December 20, 2008

Eliot Spitzer is having one hell of a bad year.

The shamed love gov revealed that his family's mega-rich real-estate firm took a hit from accused Wall Street scammer Bernard Madoff.

Spitzer, whose family is one of the richest in the city, simply shrugged his shoulders when discussing the lost loot at the holiday party for the online magazine Slate, where he writes a government regulation column, according to a report on National Public Radio.

MORE: Madoff In Con Games

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The infamous client No. 9, who was caught patronizing a prostitute and forced to resign from office in March, jokingly defended the universally loathed Madoff.

NPR radio host Brooke Gladstone, who is Jewish, joked to Spitzer that "Bernie Madoff was worse for the Jews than anyone since ['Son of Sam'] David Berkowitz."

To which Spitzer quipped, "Well, I was New York's second Jewish governor, and look what I did."

Spitzer's company is just one of a growing number of organizations - which include Yeshiva University and Steven Spielberg's Wunderkind Foundation - to have fallen victim to Madoff's greed.

Investigators now believe Madoff's fraud stretches back to the 1970s, two sources familiar with the inquiry told Bloomberg News.

The wire service also is reporting that Madoff's shady investment advisory business includes some 4,000 customers - far more than the 25 clients he registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

In the wake of the scandal, Ezra Merkin, who guided Yeshiva's ill-fated $110 million investments in Madoff-related funds, quietly stepped down from his role as chairman of the UJA-Federation's investment committee.

The UJA did not lose money on any Madoff investments in part because of their strict oversight policies, said a foundation spokeswoman.

Meanwhile, the feds slapped Madoff with a slew of new, tighter, restrictions on his relatively comfortable house arrest.

The alleged mastermind of the $50 billion Ponzi scheme must remain in his home 24 hours a day seven days a week unless he is due in court, Manhattan federal Judge Gabriel Gorenstein ordered yesterday.

Previously, he only had to be in his tony East 64th Street penthouse from 7 p.m. to 9 a.m.

Gorenstein's latest order also requires Madoff's wife, Ruth, to hire a government-approved security firm to provide services "to prevent harm or flight."

The firm will keep Madoff under round-the-clock watch and monitor all of his apartment doors on video.

In addition, Ruth Madoff, 67, will have to install an observation post that will send a direct signal to the FBI "in the event or the appearance of harm or flight."

Meanwhile, a separate order from a different federal judge is forcing the fallen financier to make a list of his ill-gotten goodies.

Judge Louis Stanton yesterday froze Madoff's assets and ordered him to itemize the vehicles, jewelry, artwork, property and cash in his possession.

bruce.golding@nypost.com



To: Tom Clarke who wrote (284901)12/22/2008 1:44:39 PM
From: FJB  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793966
 
Where'd the bailout money go? Shhhh, it's a secret
apnews.myway.com

Dec 22, 9:52 AM (ET)

By MATT APUZZO

(AP) Elizabeth Warren, who chairs an oversight committee set up by Congress to oversee the bailout, is...

WASHINGTON (AP) - It's something any bank would demand to know before handing out a loan: Where's the money going?
But after receiving billions in aid from U.S. taxpayers, the nation's largest banks say they can't track exactly how they're spending the money or they simply refuse to discuss it.
"We've lent some of it. We've not lent some of it. We've not given any accounting of, 'Here's how we're doing it,'" said Thomas Kelly, a spokesman for JPMorgan Chase, which received $25 billion in emergency bailout money. "We have not disclosed that to the public. We're declining to."
The Associated Press contacted 21 banks that received at least $1 billion in government money and asked four questions: How much has been spent? What was it spent on? How much is being held in savings, and what's the plan for the rest?
None of the banks provided specific answers.
"We're not providing dollar-in, dollar-out tracking," said Barry Koling, a spokesman for Atlanta, Ga.-based SunTrust Banks Inc., which got $3.5 billion in taxpayer dollars.
Some banks said they simply didn't know where the money was going.
"We manage our capital in its aggregate," said Regions Financial Corp. (RF) spokesman Tim Deighton, who said the Birmingham, Ala.-based company is not tracking how it is spending the $3.5 billion it received as part of the financial bailout.
The answers highlight the secrecy surrounding the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which earmarked $700 billion - about the size of the Netherlands' economy - to help rescue the financial industry. The Treasury Department has been using the money to buy stock in U.S. banks, hoping that the sudden inflow of cash will get banks to start lending money.
There has been no accounting of how banks spend that money. Lawmakers summoned bank executives to Capitol Hill last month and implored them to lend the money - not to hoard it or spend it on corporate bonuses, junkets or to buy other banks. But there is no process in place to make sure that's happening and there are no consequences for banks who don't comply.
"It is entirely appropriate for the American people to know how their taxpayer dollars are being spent in private industry," said Elizabeth Warren, the top congressional watchdog overseeing the financial bailout.
But, at least for now, there's no way for taxpayers to find that out.
Pressured by the Bush administration to approve the money quickly, Congress attached nearly no strings on the $700 billion bailout in October. And the Treasury Department, which doles out the money, never asked banks how it would be spent.
"Those are legitimate questions that should have been asked on Day One," said Rep. Scott Garrett, R-N.J., a House Financial Services Committee member who opposed the bailout as it was rushed through Congress. "Where is the money going to go to? How is it going to be spent? When are we going to get a record on it?"
Nearly every bank AP questioned - including Citibank and Bank of America, two of the largest recipients of bailout money - responded with generic public relations statements explaining that the money was being used to strengthen balance sheets and continue making loans to ease the credit crisis.
A few banks described company-specific programs, such as JPMorgan Chase's plan to lend $5 billion to nonprofit and health care companies next year. Richard Becker, senior vice president of Wisconsin-based Marshall & Ilsley Corp. (MI) (MI), said the $1.75 billion in bailout money allowed the bank to temporarily stop foreclosing on homes.
But no bank provided even the most basic accounting for the federal money.
"We're choosing not to disclose that," said Kevin Heine, spokesman for Bank of New York Mellon, which received about $3 billion.
Others said the money couldn't be tracked. Bob Denham, a spokesman for North Carolina-based BB&T Corp., said the bailout money "doesn't have its own bucket." But he said taxpayer money wasn't used in the bank's recent purchase of a Florida insurance company. Asked how he could be sure, since the money wasn't being tracked, Denham said the bank would have made that deal regardless.
Others, such as Morgan Stanley (MS) spokeswoman Carissa Ramirez, offered to discuss the matter with reporters on condition of anonymity. When AP refused, Ramirez sent an e-mail saying: "We are going to decline to comment on your story."
Most banks wouldn't say why they were keeping the details secret.
"We're not sharing any other details. We're just not at this time," said Wendy Walker, a spokeswoman for Dallas-based Comerica Inc., which received $2.25 billion from the government.
Heine, the New York Mellon Corp. spokesman who said he wouldn't share spending specifics, added: "I just would prefer if you wouldn't say that we're not going to discuss those details."
The banks which came closest to answering the questions were those, such as U.S. Bancorp and Huntington Bancshares Inc., that only recently received the money and have yet to spend it. But neither provided anything more than a generic summary of how the money would be spent.
Lawmakers say they want to tighten restrictions on the remaining, yet-to-be-released $350 billion block of bailout money before more cash is handed out. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said the department is trying to step up its monitoring of bank spending.
"What we've been doing here is moving, I think, with lightning speed to put necessary programs in place, to develop them, implement them, and then we need to monitor them while we're doing this," Paulson said at a recent forum in New York. "So we're building this organization as we're going."
Warren, the congressional watchdog appointed by Democrats, said her oversight panel will try to force the banks to say where they've spent the money.
"It would take a lot of nerve not to give answers," she said.
But Warren said she's surprised she even has to ask.
"If the appropriate restrictions were put on the money to begin with, if the appropriate transparency was in place, then we wouldn't be in a position where you're trying to call every recipient and get the basic information that should already be in public documents," she said.
Garrett, the New Jersey congressman, said the nation might never get a clear answer on where hundreds of billions of dollars went.
"A year or two ago, when we talked about spending $100 million for a bridge to nowhere, that was considered a scandal," he said.
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Associated Press writers Stevenson Jacobs in New York and Christopher S. Rugaber and Daniel Wagner in Washington contributed to this report.