Bernie Madoff Research Project Abronia S. Young D03202587 On March 12, 2009, Madoff pleaded guilty to 11 federal offenses, including securities fraud, wire fraud , mail fraud , money laundering, making false statements, perjury, theft from an employee benefit plan, and making false filings with the SEC. The Fraud In March 2009, Madoff admitted that since the mid-1990s he stopped trading and his returns had been fabricated. Madoff's sales pitch, an investment strategy consisted of purchasing blue chip stocks and taking options contracts on them, sometimes called a split-strike conversion or a collar. Typically, a position will consist of the ownership of 30–35 S&P 100 stocks, most correlated to that index, the sale of …show more content…
Frank Lautenberg | | Robert Lap pin Foundation | | Wunderkinder Foundation | | BNP Paribas | | Ira Rennert | | Englebardt Family | | Swiss Private Bank of Reichmuth & Co | | Union Bancaire Privee | | EIM Group | | UBS | | Stephen A Fine | | Avram and Carol Goldberg | | Helfman | | Saul Katz | | Irwin Kellner | | Carol and Ruth Shapiro | | Fairfield County, Connecticut | | Royal Bank of Scotland | 330,000,000 | Nomura | 302,000,000 | Aozora | 137,000,000 | Various Boston Families | | Jeff Katzenberg | | Gerald Breslauer | | Yeshiva University | | Jewish Federation of Greater Washington | 10,000,000 | Noethshore - Long Island Jewish Health systems | 5,700,000 | Razmaz School | | Chais Family Foundation | | SAR Academy | | JEHT Foundation | | Arpad Busson | | Accts Scott Sosnik & Larry Bell | | Swiss Insurer Baloise | 13,000,000 | Swiss Re | | Burt Ross | 5,000,000 | Maimonides School | 3,000,000 | Charles and Cindi Nadler | 10,000,000 | Tufts University | 20,000,000 | Alexandra Penney | | Robert Chew | | Fair Food Foundation | | Pasha and Julie Anwar | | Pedro Almodovar | |
Madoff admitted to this fraud in March 2009 and was sentenced to 150 years in prison. While the total scheme is estimated to be about $50-65 billion from his investors would account to less than $10 billion when discovered. Although the Madoff scandal revealed the activities were illegal and unethical, another scandal equally present in the scheme was that the U.S. government and regulators failed to protect investors.
Facts: In November 2008, the parties signed an employment agreement providing that Relator was to serve as the director of the school for the 2008-09 school year. The title of the agreement states the dates July 01/2008-June 30/2009. "The first sentence of the agreement lists the administrative positions to which the agreement applies and states, "This is a general at will agreement."(Ellis vs. BlueSky, 2010). Yet the agreement provides that "[p]ositions will automatically
In December 2008, one of the largest Ponzi scheme surfaced when Mark and Andrew Madoff reported the works of their father, Bernard Madoff to the federal authorities. A Ponzi scheme is an investing scam that promises high rates of return with little risk to investors. The operator generates returns for older investors by gaining new investors. Bernard was arrested on December 11, 2008 and charged with securities fraud. He pled guilty to 11 counts and was sentenced to 150 years in federal prison-the maximum possible prison sentence. A reported $17.3 billion was invested into the scam by Bernie’s clients and only about $2.48 billion have been returned to these victims as of September 2012.
Madoff’s scheme to defraud his clients at Bernard Lawrence Madoff Investment Securities began as early as 1980 and lasted until its exposure in 2008. Bernard carried out this scheme by soliciting billions of dollars under false pretenses, failing to invest investors’ funds as promised, and misappropriating and converting investors’ funds to benefit Madoff, himself, and others without the knowledge or authority of the investors. To execute the scheme, Madoff solicited and caused others to solicit potential clients to open trading accounts with Bernard Lawrence Madoff Investment Securities (BLMIS) on the basis of a promise from him. He promised to use investor funds to purchase
Bernie Madoff was one of the most prolific Ponzi-scheme artists in history. Madoff schemes netted him millions of dollars. Mr. Madoff used his BMIS Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities a New York Limited Liability company, to commit fraud, money laundering, and perjury. This is just a few things that Mr. Bernard Madoff has done to many innocent investors, who believed in Mr. Madoff, and everything he stated. Due to Mr. Madoff’s action he has changed so many people’s lives. Some have lost everything, some committed suicide, and others just humiliated by Mr. Madoff. This paper is to tell you about Mr.
The employees and traders shrugged it off. As it would later turn out, Madoff's illegal investment business was indeed subsidizing his legal trading operation. Among the charges to which Madoff pleaded guilty in March were three counts of money laundering, which involved transferring millions of dollars from Madoff's fraudulent business through his London operation to his legitimate New York business. At least $250 million was transferred in this manner, according to the charges.
In March 2009, Madoff pleaded guilty to 11 federal crimes and admitted to turning his wealth management business into a massive Ponzi scheme that defrauded thousands of investors of billions of dollars. Madoff said he began the Ponzi scheme in the early 1990s. However, federal investigators believe the fraud began as early as the 1980s, and that the investment operation may never
Unethical behavior…sounds bad doesn’t it? But what employee can truly say that he is completely innocent of any unethical behavior in the workplace? Some of the most common unethical business behaviors are fudging work hours, making phone calls on business lines and photo copying of personal paperwork. Simple acts such as these are highly unlikely to have an employee face criminal charges but when the acts of embezzling money or falsifying business records are committed a company is more apt to prosecute. People have different views regarding what is ethical and what is unethical. Some feel that it’s
Fraud in the financial community is consistently hidden in "style." Since its beginnings in the "great depression," to now, "the great recession" fraud has undoubtedly taking many forms and styles. Subsequently, many non suspecting patrons have been severely damaged as result of this greed and corruption. Many of America's largest and most established individuals are not exempt from this form of style manipulation. As we will soon see, many individuals, including Bernie Madoff, have both the ability and incentive to commit fraud. In today's fast paced information age, fraudulent activities are now becoming more difficult to detect, and even more difficult to prove. To begin, I believe it necessary to show how fraud has affected our current economic state. I will then venture as to the means in which Bernie Madoff committed fraud and the implications on current business prospects.
There is very little in the way except conjecture as to the motivation to why Madoff committed theses frauds for so long, and it appears that he is not telling either except that in 2009 where he said that in 2008 when admitting to his sons that his whole business was “just one big lie” to which the next day Madoffs sons reported him to authorities that led to his subsequent arrest. It seems as though it was not an attack of Madoffs conscious that led him to the confession, but it was because of the nature of how ponzi schemes work where the bulk of investors comprising the lower segment of investors pay for the few higher investors profits, which eventually there is no money left to pay back the vast majority of lower tier investors any profits since really the only money involved is the deposits from these investors themselves and not interest earned or investments (Henriques, 2009).
One of the schemes includes Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme. Bernie Madoff was the head a huge investment firm that catered to thousands of people. Bernie claims that the firm was “just one big lie ” which was an understatement, for the huge stunt that he managed to pull off. Over the years, Bernie had collected over fifty billion dollars for his personal investors. To keep the fraud hidden from the public he used a famous con move known as the Ponzi scheme.
Bernard Madoff founded Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities in 1960, with an investmento of only $5,000 earned as a beach lifeguard and a lawn sprinkler installer. He was seen as a genius and the most sympathetic and friendly broker in the country. Madoff became the responsible for the largest financial scam in history after applying the most jaded of financial scheme. A stroke of billions of dollars and harmed many customers. But after 20 years of this scam, he admitted having ridden a giant pyramid scheme type after being arrested. The scheme is to pay older clients with money from new investors, without producing real income. Madoff even became chairman of Nasdaq, the
In December of 2008, Madoff turned himself into the authorities because his operation was just a giant Ponzi Scheme. His investors were scared of losing more money in the recession so they tried
The fraud perpetrated by Bernard Madoff which was discovered in December, 2008 is based upon a Ponzi scheme. Madoff took money from new investors to pay earnings for existing customers. The greater the payout to retiring and withdrawing customer, the more revenue or clients he would need to start and “investment relationship” with Madoff. The Ponzi scheme was named after Charles Ponzi who in the early 20th Century, saw a way to profit from international reply coupons. International reply coupons were a guarantee of return postage in response to an international letter. Charles Ponzi determined that he could make money, legally, by swapping out these coupons for more expensive
Bernard Lawrence Madoff, a former chairman of the NASDAQ Stock Market and founder of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, was one of the few NASDAQ market-makers who competed with the New York Stock Exchange, by trading stocks listed on the Big Board. Through the Cincinnati exchange, the Madoff was a pioneer in electronic trading and publicly spoke of the need to use technology to transform the inefficient and sometimes shady over-the-counter stock market (Monica Gagnier, 2008). But Madoff became famous for a very different reason on December 10, 2008 when Madoff 's sons told authorities that their father had confessed to them that the asset management unit of his firm was a massive Ponzi scheme. On March 12, 2009, Madoff pleaded