[cia-drugs] Fwd: [ctrl] The Madoff scandal

2008-12-16 Thread RoadsEnd



Begin forwarded message:

From: Alamaine, IVe fratl...@gra.midco.net
Date: December 16, 2008 6:56:28 AM PST
To: c...@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ctrl] The Madoff scandal
Reply-To: c...@yahoogroups.com

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/dec2008/pers-d16.shtml
World Socialist Web Site
wsws.org

The Madoff scandal
16 December 2008


The repercussions from the collapse of Bernard L. Madoff Investment  
Securities
LLC, whose founder and owner was arrested last Thursday after  
admitting that

his $17 billion investment advisory business was a giant Ponzi scheme,
continue to widen. According to a criminal complaint filed by the FBI  
and a
civil action brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC),  
the
elderly Madoff estimated that the losses from his fraud exceeded $50  
billion.

The tally of losses already reported by banks, hedge funds and wealthy
investors climbed over the weekend to nearly $20 billion.

Banks and hedge funds around the world-in the US, Britain, Italy, Spain,
France, Switzerland and Japan-are reporting hundreds of millions and  
even
billions in losses. University endowments, charities and other  
institutions

that entrusted their money to Madoff or to hedge funds that invested in
Madoff's company are reeling from the news that their investments are
worthless.

Prominent and wealthy individuals-including J. Ezra Merkin, the  
chairman of
GMAC, Fred Wilpon, the principal owner of the New York Mets, Norman  
Braman, the
former owner of the Philadelphia Eagles professional football team,  
Frank

Lautenberg, the multimillionaire Democratic senator from New Jersey, and
Mortimer Zuckerman, the owner of the New York Daily News-are among  
those who

have lost millions. Among the thousands and even tens of thousands of
individuals likely to be affected is no small number of retirees of  
relatively

modest means whose life savings were tied into Madoff's operation.

The fallout from the Madoff scandal will inevitably result in the  
failure of
other investment firms, impacting thousands more individuals and  
hundreds more

businesses.

Madoff's scam could not have been carried out without the complicity  
of the

highest echelons of the financial elite and the government.

US officials now allege that Madoff was engaged in a Ponzi scheme- 
using new
revenues from investors to meet payments due to existing investors-at  
least
since 2005. As of yet, no one really knows how long Madoff, a former  
chairman
of the Nasdaq Stock Market and current member of the board of  
governors of the
National Association of Securities Dealers, was paying his old clients  
with
money obtained from new ones. The scheme collapsed after clients  
requested some

$7 billion in redemptions.

As the New York Times reported Saturday, There is fragmentary  
evidence that
Mr. Madoff's alleged scam may have lasted for years or even decades...  
It is
not even clear whether Mr. Madoff actually made any of the trades he  
reported

to investors.

One thing is clear, Madoff, known as a Wall Street legend, was a man  
with many
connections in high places. Since 2000, he has given at least $100,000  
to the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and more than $23,000 to the  
party's
candidates, including Senator Charles Schumer of New York, the  
chairman of the
Joint Economic Committee of Congress, and Senator Lautenberg. His  
legal defense

team includes Mark Mukasey, the son of the current attorney general.

There were ample signs that Madoff's operation was fraudulent. He made  
his
reputation and his millions by delivering solid returns of 1 or 2  
percent a
month to his investors month in and month out from the day he launched  
his
investment advisory business as an adjunct to his brokerage firm.  
Wealthy
investors and hedge fund operators marveled as Madoff worked his  
magic in
bull markets and bear markets alike, regardless of the gyrations on  
the stock

market.

But there were also those who realized that such consistent returns  
could not
be achieved through legal means. They looked at Madoff's amazing  
record, the
secretive nature of his investment funds and the fact that his  
auditing firm
was an obscure one-room operation based in New City, New York, and  
concluded

that Madoff was working a scam.

One executive in the securities industry, beginning in 1999,  
repeatedly urged
the SEC to investigate Madoff. Madoff Securities is the world's  
largest Ponzi
scheme, he wrote in one letter to the SEC. Other investment firms  
steered

their clients away from Madoff.

The SEC, which had investigated and cleared Madoff in 1992, refused to
intervene. On the contrary, he was appointed to a committee of  
academics,
regulators and executives formed in 2000 by former SEC Chairman Arthur  
Levitt
to advise the agency on new stock market rules in response to the  
growth of

electronic trading.

The role of the SEC epitomizes the transformation of government  
regulatory
agencies into the 

Re: [cia-drugs] Fwd: [ctrl] The Madoff scandal

2008-12-16 Thread Mary Hartman
Highlighted in blue: this is probably the ONLY reason this case was 
prosecuted.  The DOJ does not take down big fish when they have bilked millions 
from little guys - only when they've angered big friends.

--- On Tue, 12/16/08, RoadsEnd roads...@aol.com wrote:
From: RoadsEnd roads...@aol.com
Subject: [cia-drugs] Fwd: [ctrl] The Madoff scandal
To: Cia-drugs Cia-drugs Cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, December 16, 2008, 3:19 PM













Begin forwarded message:
From: Alamaine, IVe fratl...@gra. midco.netDate: December 16, 2008 6:56:28 
AM PSTTo: c...@yahoogroups. comSubject: [ctrl] The Madoff scandalReply-To: 
c...@yahoogroups. com
 http://www.wsws. org/articles/ 2008/dec2008/ pers-d16. shtml
World Socialist Web Site
wsws.org 

The Madoff scandal
16 December 2008


The repercussions from the collapse of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities 
LLC, whose founder and owner was arrested last Thursday after admitting that 
his $17 billion investment advisory business was a giant Ponzi scheme, 
continue to widen. According to a criminal complaint filed by the FBI and a 
civil action brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the 
elderly Madoff estimated that the losses from his fraud exceeded $50 billion. 
The tally of losses already reported by banks, hedge funds and wealthy 
investors climbed over the weekend to nearly $20 billion.

Banks and hedge funds around the world-in the US, Britain, Italy, Spain, 
France, Switzerland and Japan-are reporting hundreds of millions and even 
billions in losses. University endowments, charities and other institutions 
that entrusted their money to Madoff or to hedge funds that invested in 
Madoff's company are reeling from the news that their investments are 
worthless.

Prominent and wealthy individuals- including J. Ezra Merkin, the chairman of 
GMAC, Fred Wilpon, the principal owner of the New York Mets, Norman Braman, the 
former owner of the Philadelphia Eagles professional football team, Frank 
Lautenberg, the multimillionaire Democratic senator from New Jersey, and 
Mortimer Zuckerman, the owner of the New York Daily News-are among those who 
have lost millions. Among the thousands and even tens of thousands of 
individuals likely to be affected is no small number of retirees of relatively 
modest means whose life savings were tied into Madoff's operation.

The fallout from the Madoff scandal will inevitably result in the failure of 
other investment firms, impacting thousands more individuals and hundreds more 
businesses.

Madoff's scam could not have been carried out without the complicity of the 
highest echelons of the financial elite and the government.

US officials now allege that Madoff was engaged in a Ponzi scheme-using new 
revenues from investors to meet payments due to existing investors-at least 
since 2005. As of yet, no one really knows how long Madoff, a former chairman 
of the Nasdaq Stock Market and current member of the board of governors of the 
National Association of Securities Dealers, was paying his old clients with 
money obtained from new ones. The scheme collapsed after clients requested some 
$7 billion in redemptions.

As the New York Times reported Saturday, There is fragmentary evidence that 
Mr. Madoff's alleged scam may have lasted for years or even decades... It is 
not even clear whether Mr. Madoff actually made any of the trades he reported 
to investors.

One thing is clear, Madoff, known as a Wall Street legend, was a man with many 
connections in high places. Since 2000, he has given at least $100,000 to the 
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and more than $23,000 to the party's 
candidates, including Senator Charles Schumer of New York, the chairman of the 
Joint Economic Committee of Congress, and Senator Lautenberg. His legal defense 
team includes Mark Mukasey, the son of the current attorney general.

There were ample signs that Madoff's operation was fraudulent. He made his 
reputation and his millions by delivering solid returns of 1 or 2 percent a 
month to his investors month in and month out from the day he launched his 
investment advisory business as an adjunct to his brokerage firm. Wealthy 
investors and hedge fund operators marveled as Madoff worked his magic in 
bull markets and bear markets alike, regardless of the gyrations on the stock 
market.

But there were also those who realized that such consistent returns could not 
be achieved through legal means. They looked at Madoff's amazing record, the 
secretive nature of his investment funds and the fact that his auditing firm 
was an obscure one-room operation based in New City, New York, and concluded 
that Madoff was working a scam.

One executive in the securities industry, beginning in 1999, repeatedly urged 
the SEC to investigate Madoff. Madoff Securities is the world's largest Ponzi 
scheme, he wrote in one letter to the SEC. Other investment firms steered 
their clients away from Madoff.

The SEC

Re: [cia-drugs] Fwd: [ctrl] The Madoff scandal

2008-12-16 Thread michael1
We can't say at this point what is really going on here, but we can say
that this scandal occurs at a point when the financial system is
liquidating as the various players are battling each other in a desperate
fight for survival, with the more powerful eating the weaker. The
suspicion grows that the Madoff affair is itself a cover-up for something
even worse.

Still, whatever it is, it serves as yet another reminder that the system
itself is corrupt, the product of speculation gone not only unchecked, but
actively promoted by those whose responsibility was to protect the public
trust. This system is beyond redemption, and must be shut down.

http://www.larouchepac.com/news/2008/12/16/whats-really-going-madoff-affair.html

 Highlighted in blue: this is probably the ONLY reason this case was
 prosecuted.  The DOJ does not take down big fish when they have bilked
 millions from little guys - only when they've angered big friends.

 --- On Tue, 12/16/08, RoadsEnd roads...@aol.com wrote:
 From: RoadsEnd roads...@aol.com
 Subject: [cia-drugs] Fwd: [ctrl] The Madoff scandal
 To: Cia-drugs Cia-drugs Cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Tuesday, December 16, 2008, 3:19 PM













 Begin forwarded message:
 From: Alamaine, IVe fratl...@gra. midco.netDate: December 16, 2008
 6:56:28 AM PSTTo: c...@yahoogroups. comSubject: [ctrl] The Madoff
 scandalReply-To: c...@yahoogroups. com
  http://www.wsws. org/articles/ 2008/dec2008/ pers-d16. shtml
 World Socialist Web Site
 wsws.org

 The Madoff scandal
 16 December 2008


 The repercussions from the collapse of Bernard L. Madoff Investment
 Securities
 LLC, whose founder and owner was arrested last Thursday after admitting
 that
 his $17 billion investment advisory business was a giant Ponzi scheme,
 continue to widen. According to a criminal complaint filed by the FBI and
 a
 civil action brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the
 elderly Madoff estimated that the losses from his fraud exceeded $50
 billion.
 The tally of losses already reported by banks, hedge funds and wealthy
 investors climbed over the weekend to nearly $20 billion.

 Banks and hedge funds around the world-in the US, Britain, Italy, Spain,
 France, Switzerland and Japan-are reporting hundreds of millions and even
 billions in losses. University endowments, charities and other
 institutions
 that entrusted their money to Madoff or to hedge funds that invested in
 Madoff's company are reeling from the news that their investments are
 worthless.

 Prominent and wealthy individuals- including J. Ezra Merkin, the chairman
 of
 GMAC, Fred Wilpon, the principal owner of the New York Mets, Norman
 Braman, the
 former owner of the Philadelphia Eagles professional football team, Frank
 Lautenberg, the multimillionaire Democratic senator from New Jersey, and
 Mortimer Zuckerman, the owner of the New York Daily News-are among those
 who
 have lost millions. Among the thousands and even tens of thousands of
 individuals likely to be affected is no small number of retirees of
 relatively
 modest means whose life savings were tied into Madoff's operation.

 The fallout from the Madoff scandal will inevitably result in the failure
 of
 other investment firms, impacting thousands more individuals and hundreds
 more
 businesses.

 Madoff's scam could not have been carried out without the complicity of
 the
 highest echelons of the financial elite and the government.

 US officials now allege that Madoff was engaged in a Ponzi scheme-using
 new
 revenues from investors to meet payments due to existing investors-at
 least
 since 2005. As of yet, no one really knows how long Madoff, a former
 chairman
 of the Nasdaq Stock Market and current member of the board of governors of
 the
 National Association of Securities Dealers, was paying his old clients
 with
 money obtained from new ones. The scheme collapsed after clients requested
 some
 $7 billion in redemptions.

 As the New York Times reported Saturday, There is fragmentary evidence
 that
 Mr. Madoff's alleged scam may have lasted for years or even decades... It
 is
 not even clear whether Mr. Madoff actually made any of the trades he
 reported
 to investors.

 One thing is clear, Madoff, known as a Wall Street legend, was a man with
 many
 connections in high places. Since 2000, he has given at least $100,000 to
 the
 Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and more than $23,000 to the
 party's
 candidates, including Senator Charles Schumer of New York, the chairman of
 the
 Joint Economic Committee of Congress, and Senator Lautenberg. His legal
 defense
 team includes Mark Mukasey, the son of the current attorney general.

 There were ample signs that Madoff's operation was fraudulent. He made his
 reputation and his millions by delivering solid returns of 1 or 2 percent
 a
 month to his investors month in and month out from the day he launched his
 investment advisory business as an adjunct to his brokerage firm. Wealthy
 investors and hedge