Where Are Bernie Madoff and His Inner Circle Now?

2
1988

EDITOR’S NOTE: Whatever… there is little point in working so hard to steal that much money and then leave tracks all over the place.

Anyone smart or cunning enough, to steal that much money certainly must have known how to make a large part of it “disappear” to the point where only he or his friends could ever recover it without leaving tracks, Believe it!

This is not petty theft, and Bernie Madoff is not a petty thief!

Willie Sutton was a better bank robber than most Bankers were Bankers, and would have been a better banker than most, except that he chose to rob them directly rather than from the inside like most bankers.

Bernie Madoff would have probably been a better banker than most, also, if he had chosen to be, instead of a thief. After all, he and his cohorts succeeded for 70 billion dollars worth and over a lengthy period of time.

The money is gone, gone! It has been converted into shekels long ago.

— Editor, Debbie Menon


__________________

Madoff brought his family down with him

Sam Frizell, Time, Dec. 11, 2014

Bernard Madoff walks out of Federal Court on Jan. 5, 2009, in New York City Jin Lee—Bloomberg News / Getty Images
Bernard Madoff walks out of Federal Court on Jan. 5, 2009, in New York City
Jin Lee—Bloomberg News / Getty Images

Bernard “Bernie” Madoff, the most extraordinary swindler of the heady pre-recession years, was arrested six years ago on Thursday, but the distrust that his dealings directed toward the financial system is indelible. Many people know a friend, relative or school acquaintance whose college savings or retirement fund was pillaged by Madoff’s gargantuan Ponzi scheme. The Occupy movement, the Heartland’s vitriolic anger towards bankers, and the proverbial Main Street-Wall Street divide are all linked to the mess Madoff sank himself into. His loss of $65 billion in Americans’ savings rattled what little confidence many Americans still had in Wall Street and the finance industry.

The well-known director Michael Moore wrote a commentary on the scammer for TIME in the Spring of 2009, shortly before Madoff was sentenced to 150 years in prison. Moore proclaimed him the incorrigible tip of the iceberg:

“If Ponzi schemes are such a bad thing, then why have we allowed all of our top banks to deal in credit default swaps and other make-believe rackets? Why did we allow those same banks to create the scam of a sub-prime mortgage? And instead of putting the people responsible in the cell block in Lower Manhattan, where Bernie now resides, why did we give them huge sums of our hard-earned tax dollars to bail them out of their self-inflicted troubles? Bernard Madoff is nothing more than the scab on the wound. He’s also a most-needed and convenient distraction. Where’s the photo on this list of the ex-chairmen of AIG, Merrill Lynch and Citigroup? Where’s the mug shot of Phil Gramm, the senator who wrote the bill to strip the system of its regulations, or of the President who signed that bill?”

Moore’s is a sentiment that still rings true years after the depth of the financial crisis: Where is the retribution?

In fact, Madoff’s circle of friends and family bore much of it. Ruth Madoff, disgraced after her husband’s fall, endured a series of public shamings in the year after Bernie’s sentencing, including being stripped of $80 million in assets. She cut off contact with her husband and moved to son Andrew’s house in Connecticut. Madoff’s eldest son, Mark Madoff, committed suicidein 2010, and his younger son, Andrew, died this year of lymphoma. Madoff’s long time assistant, 66-year-oldAnnette Bongiorno, was sentenced just this week to a six-year prison term, and Jerome O’Hara, a computer programmer for Madoff, was sentenced to two-and-a-half years. Brother Peter Madoff is serving a 10-year sentence in federal prison and forfeited all his personal assets.

Madoff himself has shown a measure of remorse, though it’s not likely to be enough for the people whose savings disappeared. He told Politico earlier this year that he has not changed: “There’s nothing for me to change from. It’s not like I ever considered myself a bad person. I made a horrible mistake and I’m sorry.”

 

Original source: Time Magazine

Also see:

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
EDITORIAL DISCLOSURE
All content herein is owned by author exclusively.  Expressed opinions are NOT necessarily the views of VNR, authors, affiliates, advertisers, sponsors, partners, technicians, or VT Network.  Some content may be satirical in nature. 
All images within are full responsibility of the author and NOT VNR.

Read Full Policy Notice - Comment Policy

2 COMMENTS

  1. Sam Frizell very adeptly puts his finger on the wound and identifies it with the Michael Moore quote above. I think the problem began when the bankers who make the lending rules, led the lemmings off the proven path of “…healthy balance sheets, and started lending to “unsound” borrowers, then abandoned them and cutting their safety ropes, as they, predictably, became mired down in the swamps. It has something to do with moral virtue. the kind of thing which Warren Buffet spoke of, when he said, “It takes 20 years to build a reputation and 5 minutes to ruin it. If you think about that you will do things differently.”

Comments are closed.