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Showing posts with label ponzi scheme. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ponzi scheme. Show all posts

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Madoff ruined lives, victims say. Madoff ordered to forfeit over $170 billion

Madoff ordered to forfeit over $170 billion
NY prosecutors: Judge orders disgraced financier Bernard Madoff to forfeit over $170 billion

NEW YORK (AP) -- Disgraced financier Bernard Madoff must forfeit $170 billion, a federal judge ordered Friday.

U.S. District Judge Denny Chin entered a preliminary order of forfeiture, and Acting U.S. Attorney Lev Dassin released a copy of the order Friday night. Madoff was ordered to give up his interests in all property, including real estate, investments, cars and boats.

According to earlier court documents, prosecutors reserved the right to pursue more than $170 billion in criminal forfeiture. That represents the total amount of money that could be connected to the fraud, not the amount stolen or lost.

The government also settled claims against Madoff's wife, according to Friday's order. Under the arrangement, the government obtained Ruth Madoff's interest in all property, including more than $80 million of property to which she had claimed was hers, prosecutors said.

The order makes it clear, though, that nothing precludes other departments or entities from seeking to recover additional funds.

A call to Madoff's lawyer, Ira Sorkin, after hours Friday was not immediately returned.

In his own court filing in March, Sorkin said the government's forfeiture demand of $177 billion was "grossly overstated -- and misleading -- even for a case of this magnitude."
The agreements strip the Madoffs of all their interest in properties belonging to them, including homes in Manhattan, Montauk, and Palm Beach, Fla., worth a total of nearly $22 million. The Madoff's must also forfeit all insured or salable personal property contained in the homes.

Other seized assets include accounts at Cohmad Securities Corp., valued at almost $50 million, and at Wachovia Bank, valued at just over $13 million, and tens of millions of dollars in loans extended by Madoff to family, employees and friends.
The judge's order also authorized the U.S. Marshals Service to sell the Manhattan co-op, properties in Montauk and Palm Beach and certain cars and boats.

Madoff, 71, is due to be sentenced Monday after pleading guilty in March to charges that his exclusive investment advisory business was actually a massive Ponzi scheme.
Federal prosecutors want Madoff to be sentenced to 150 years in prison for orchestrating perhaps the largest financial swindle in history.

Madoff's lawyer has said his client should serve only 12 years.
"The sheer scale of the fraud calls for severe punishment," the prosecutors wrote in response to a defense motion seeking lighter punishment.
Federal sentencing guidelines allow for the 150-year term, prosecutors said. Any lesser sentence, they added, should still be long enough to send a forceful message and "assure that Madoff will remain in prison for life."
The government's papers quoted from letters to U.S. District Judge Denny Chin written by victims of the scheme who are suffering severe hardships.

Madoff "ruined lives," one letter said. "He deserves no mercy."

At the time of Madoff's arrest, fictitious account statements showed thousands of clients had $65 billion. But investigators say he never traded securities, and instead used money from new investors to pay returns to existing clients.
Prosecutors said Friday that the total losses, which span decades, haven't been calculated. But 1,341 accounts opened since December 1995 alone suffered loses of $13.2 billion, they said.
Sorkin argued in court papers last week for a 12-year term. He said his client deserved credit for his voluntary surrender, full acceptance of responsibility and meaningful cooperation efforts.
"We seek neither mercy nor sympathy," Sorkin wrote. But he urged the judge to "set aside the emotion and hysteria attendant to this case" as he determines the sentence.
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Sunday, December 14, 2008

The Madoff Fraud, and the uncertainty

The story about Bernie Madoff's Ponzi Scheme is becoming pretty important and is getting a global impact with unknown effects.
In short, the New York financier and Ex-Nasdaq chairman Bernard L. Madoff was arrested last Thursday (Dec 11th) by the FBI on alleged securities fraud and running an illegal Ponzi Scheme. The total amount of damage could go up to 40 billion U.S. Dollar.
It is already rippling through the Global Financial World from the U.S.A to Europe (Switzerland) to Israël. Madoff was arrested after his own sons gave evidence to the FBI. Not only the wealthy and powerful are hit by this scandal.
Bernie Madoff was heavily involved with investments in the more than 1 Trillio Dollar Hedge Fund Industry.
Generally speaking: this could not have happened at a worser time for the global stock markets, and it makes people shiver at what more bad news is to emerge.
The last full trading week of the year could be one of high volatility.
On this blog we have already collected news and information about the Madoff case.
See these links.

The effect of the 'Madoff Mess' on the Markets


The Ponzi Scheme

Friday, December 12, 2008

The Ponzi Scheme

Bernard L. Madoff, 'your friendly uncle'

The Ponzi Scheme is simular to a Pyramid Scheme. It's likely to stay around in good and in bad economic times. Investors should be cautious for investments or investment proposals promising very high yielding returns with little risk.

(From Investopedia)
A fraudulent investing scam that promises high rates of return at little risk to investors. The scheme generates returns for older investors by acquiring new investors. This scam actually yields the promised returns to earlier investors, as long as there are more new investors.

Investopedia Says... The Ponzi scam is named after Charles Ponzi, a clerk in Boston who first orchestrated such a scheme in 1919.
A Ponzi scheme is similar to a pyramid scheme in that both are based on using new investors' funds to pay the earlier backers. One difference between the two schemes is that the Ponzi mastermind gathers all relevant funds from new investors and then distributes them. Pyramid schemes, on the other hand, allow each investor to directly benefit depending on how many new investors are recruited. In this case, the person on the top of the pyramid does not at any point have access to all the money in the system.
For both schemes, however, eventually there isn't enough money to go around and the schemes unravel.

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Kijk voor de hele soap rond Palm Invest, inclusief boodschappenlijstje, juridische stukken en andere details op Quotenet.




The most recent Ponzi Scheme (still developing). It promises to become the worst in history, an ex-Nasdaq chairman accused of a $ 50 billion dollar Ponzi Scheme.
Ex-Nasdaq chair arrested for securities fraud
Bernard Madoff was arrested Thursday and charged with operating a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme from his investment advisory business.

The Beurskrach blog will keep you updated, add to your favorites.