NEW YORK (CNN) -- The wife of accused swindler Bernard Madoff pulled
$15.5 million out of a Madoff-related brokerage firm in Massachusetts
in the weeks before his arrest, authorities there disclosed Wednesday.

Bernard Madoff is under 24-hour house arrest in his Upper East Side
luxury apartment.

 The withdrawals by Ruth Madoff took place in November and December,
according to a complaint filed by state regulators against Cohmad
Securities, a firm they said was "intertwined" with Madoff's New York-
based company.

The regulators say Cohmad has refused to provide information about its
ties to Madoff, who is accused of running a Ponzi scheme that may have
cost investors up to $50 billion.

Daily wire transaction reports show Cohmad was aware of transfers to
and from Madoff-related accounts, the filing states.

"For example, the few reports produced by Cohmad show that Ruth Madoff
withdrew $5.5 million on November 25, 2008 and withdrew $10 million on
December 10, 2008," investigators said.

Bernard Madoff, 70, was arrested December 11 and is currently under
house arrest in his Manhattan luxury apartment. He faces one charge of
securities fraud in connection with an international scheme that has
cost some investors their life savings and could face up to 20 years
in prison and a $5 million fine if convicted.

In January, prosecutors tried to revoke his $10 million bail after he
mailed more than $1 million worth of diamond-studded jewelry to
friends and family, a move they said showed he was trying to move
assets out of government hands. But a judge ruled Madoff was neither a
danger to the community nor a flight risk.

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Prosecutors and Madoff's lawyers have agreed for a second time to push
back the deadline for an indictment or probable cause hearing for the
former investor, sources close to the case said Wednesday. The
previous deadline of Wednesday -- which was itself a delay -- has now
been moved back another 30 days.

Madoff and the Securities and Exchange Commission already have agreed
to a partial civil judgment against the disgraced investment manager,
one that could eventually force him to pay fines and return investors'
money.

Under the terms of the deal, Madoff will keep a previously reached
agreement to freeze his assets and not to violate any other securities
laws, but it does not require him to admit or deny any allegations.
---
imo - they were tipped off

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