
(U.S. Marshals Service)
By Marlys Harris of MoneyWatch.com.
Victims of Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme may have allowed themselves a rare smile on July 14, when the 71-year-old was locked up in a prison cell at a federal correctional center in Butner, N.C. His new neighbors behind the barbed wire include terrorist Omar Abdel Rahman, the "Blind Sheik" who masterminded the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, and John Rigas, the disgraced former CEO of Adelphia. Madoff, who reportedly was assigned to work in the prison's engraving shop, is scheduled to be released in 2136. In other words, barring a miracle, Bernie Madoff will never be free again.
But there won't be any real justice until investors recoup at least some of the estimated $65 billion he stole. In letter after letter to U.S. District Court Judge Denny Chin, who presided over the case,
Madoff victims wrote of personal privations they had suffered: homes lost, newly destitute parents pressed to move out of nursing homes they can no longer afford, children forced to withdraw from college, people returning to work after years of retirement. Says Ronnie Sue Ambrosino, who with her husband Dominic lost $1.6 million: "Until we get our money, there is no justice."
Past victims of Ponzi schemes have historically recovered only pennies on the dollar, if anything. Often, bankruptcy trustees and other officials moved so sluggishly to recover stolen funds that the miscreant and his family had plenty of time to stash their gains offshore. In this case, however, bankruptcy trustee Irving Picard rushed to locate Madoff's money and to sue any beneficiaries of the fraud. To determine to what degree he and other officials keep faith with investors, I have taken it as my mission in the coming months (and years) to follow the efforts to recoup the money. You'll be able to read all about it here and in my blog,
The Consumer Reporter.
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