NEW YORK, Dec. 12, 2008

Wall Street Powerbroker Arrested For Fraud

Feds Say Ex-Nasdaq Chairman Bernard Madoff Swindled Investors Out Of $50B

  • Play CBS Video Video Wealthy Investors Swindled

    Bernard Madoff, a former head of NASDAQ, was taken into custody after reportedly admitting to losing about $50 billion in investors' funds in a "Ponzi" scheme, reports Armen Keteyian.

  • Richard Grasso, president, New York Stock Exchange, left, joined by former Security and Exchange Commission Chairman, center, and Bernard Madoff, chairman of Madoff Investment Securities before the House subcommittee on Telecommunications and Finance on Thursday, May 13, 1993 in Washington.

    Richard Grasso, president, New York Stock Exchange, left, joined by former Security and Exchange Commission Chairman, center, and Bernard Madoff, chairman of Madoff Investment Securities before the House subcommittee on Telecommunications and Finance on Thursday, May 13, 1993 in Washington.  (AP Photo)

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(CBS/ AP)  A Wall Street powerbroker for nearly 50 years who built an influential firm has confessed to a massive fraud scheme that will cost investors at least $50 billion, federal authorities say.

Bernard L. Madoff, 70, facing a single count of securities fraud, declined to speak with reporters after a federal magistrate judge in U.S. District Court in Manhattan ordered him released Thursday night on $10 million bail.

Andrew M. Calamari, associate director of enforcement in the Securities and Exchange Commission's New York office, said the SEC had filed a civil securities fraud charge as well and was alleging "a stunning fraud that appears to be of epic proportions."

The SEC said it was seeking emergency relief for investors, including an asset freeze and the appointment of a receiver for the firm. A hearing was scheduled for Friday.

If the allegations contained in a criminal complaint are true, it may be the largest fraud ever blamed on a single individual. Nearly all of the allegations stem from an FBI agent's recounting of what Madoff told two FBI agents and three senior employees of his firm, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC.

Senior employees, believed to include Madoff's own sons, turned him in to authorities, reports CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian.

From exclusive Palm Beach country clubs to the tony Upper East Side of Manhattan, victims of the fraud -- many who had invested millions - are reeling, Keteyian reports.

"These are people who are wealthy individuals who are now looking at utter devastation," said Brad Friedman, attorney for the fraud victims.

It would be a steep fall for Madoff, a former Nasdaq stock market chairman who founded his business in 1960 with $5,000 he earned in part working as a lifeguard on Long Island beaches.

His firm was a market maker, handling trades in some of the largest securities on various stock exchanges, matching buyers and sellers. Investigators say Madoff's crime originated in a separate and secretive investment-advising business that served between 11 and 25 clients and had a total of about $17.1 billion in assets under management.

Stephen A. Weiss, a lawyer for several dozen investors, said there are many more investors. He said he "personally spoke with over 30 investors" who are believed to have invested more than $1 billion with Madoff.

The criminal complaint signed by FBI Agent Theodore Cacioppi said Madoff told at least three senior employees at his Manhattan apartment Wednesday that the investment adviser business was a fraud and had been insolvent for years, losing at least $50 billion.

Madoff told the employees he was "finished," that he had "absolutely nothing," that "it's all just one big lie" and it was "basically, a giant Ponzi scheme," according to the complaint filed in court.

The employees understood Madoff's admission to mean that "he had for years been paying returns to certain investors out of the principal received from other, different, investors," said the complaint, which did not identify the investors impacted by the scheme.

Cacioppi said one of the employees told him that Madoff was "cryptic" about the firm's investment advisory business and kept its financial statements locked up. The FBI agent said another employee told him that Madoff last week said clients had asked for about $7 billion in redemptions and he was struggling to meet those obligations but thought he could do so.

Cacioppi said two senior Madoff employees told him that Madoff said during the Wednesday meeting that he planned to surrender to authorities in a week but first wanted to distribute $200 million to $300 million he had left to certain selected employees, family and friends.

Cacioppi said he and another FBI agent arrived Thursday at Madoff's apartment, where Madoff invited them in and acknowledged knowing why they were there.

"Madoff stated, in substance, that he had personally traded and lost money for institutional clients, and that it was all his fault," Cacioppi said.

The agent wrote that Madoff said he had "paid investors with money that wasn't there" and that he was broke and insolvent and had decided that "it could not go on" and that he expected to go to jail.

Defense lawyer Dan Horwitz called Madoff "a person of integrity" and said he intends to fight the charge.

If convicted, Madoff could face up to 20 years in prison and a maximum fine of $5 million.

Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC ranks among the top 1 percent of U.S. securities firms, according to the company's Web site.

In 2001, Barron's reported that Madoff's firm was one of the three top market makers in Nasdaq stocks and the third-largest firm matching buyers and sellers of securities on the New York Stock Exchange.

Shortly after leaving law school, Madoff founded his firm in 1960. It was one of five broker-dealers most closely involved in developing the Nasdaq Stock Market, where he served as a member of the board of governors in the 1980s and as chairman of the board of directors.

In the 1990s, Madoff was viewed as a maverick. He angered leaders of the New York and American stock exchanges by taking away some of their business by paying brokerage firms a penny a share to route orders through his system.


© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 58 Comments
by cbsblogger December 14, 2008 11:03 PM EST
Very few media sites have comments enabled on this story. The victims are mostly ultra rich Jews and they are all embarrassed to have been ripped off by a fellow Jew. The Talmud restricts scamming of Jews by Jews but it''s OK to scam non-Jews.

Greed was at the heart of it all because they were doing it on faith expecting high returns. They all thought he was operating on inside information.

Hedge funds and their investors such as Madoff''s fought against government regulation because they wanted free wheeling opportunities. Now that they''ve lost big time due to their own greed, under no circumstances should taxpayers be required to bail them out. If so we taxpayers need to initiate a rebel.
Reply to this comment
by dbstevens December 14, 2008 10:19 PM EST
This guy has hurt more people than any single human being has done recently except for Bush. And the threat of a 20 year jail sentence and a fine of $5million is ridiculous. I think they should sell his internal organs. It''s one thing for big companies to be hurt by this...that''s atrocious. But there are a LOT more individuals than people realize. Some very dear friends of mine who are not really rich (and not even Jewish ... the hateful bigoted comments in this board are disgusting) have lost everything. They and their kids are penniless, all because of this creep. Their story is bound to be echoed by lots of others.
Reply to this comment
by wardoglrs December 14, 2008 7:57 PM EST
Look very closely and you will find that most of the swindlers are Jew as are more & more Jew''s are placed in power positions in the White House. The US government is a fraud plain and simple
Reply to this comment
by mediai11ness December 14, 2008 4:38 PM EST
wow..im sooooo surprised...
Reply to this comment
by snoop99991 December 14, 2008 1:49 PM EST
I love it. A bunch of rich greedy wealthy Jews going for more and getting ripped off by another Jew. The clients are as bad as Madoof, they knew the returns they were getting were not on the up and up and yet in their greed they turned a blind eye. They got what they truly deserved - nothing!
Reply to this comment
by whitemale08 December 14, 2008 2:36 AM EST
Right now ''helicopter'' Ben has conducting his own illegal PONZI scheme by having the Federal Reserve System illegaly issue it''s own ''debt-bond'' so idiots who have their money in this Treasury-bubble can escape and flee to these ''Fed-bonds''.

That''s ILLEGAL!

Only Congress can authorize the mortgage of America not a cartel of privately held banks that make up the private Federal Reserve System.

This is dangerous because the Federal Reserve will try and bail out the multi-quadrillion ''dollar'' derivatives market with its own ''debt-bond''.

THAT''S IMPOSSIBLE AND IT''S A PONZI SCHEME WORSE A MILLION TIMES WORSE THEN THIS MADOFF CLOWN!!!
Reply to this comment
by gorgeousm December 13, 2008 9:27 PM EST
This parasite took away lives from his victims.

Take his away from him as justice.
Reply to this comment
by cbsblogger December 13, 2008 5:38 PM EST
For a list of the victims check this out.....many are billionaires. Google madoff wiki .

The question now is has the Fed already bailed them out as part of the $2 Trillion dollars that they refuse to disclose the recipients.

Reply to this comment
by cbsblogger December 13, 2008 5:12 PM EST
There are a bunch of other shyster connivers just like Madoff on Wall St who are the primary culprits that have cost Americans their nest eggs and pensions. They are getting bailed out by Bernanke and Paulson, but average Americans aren''t.
Reply to this comment
by mrjustice1 December 13, 2008 2:49 PM EST
If the government fails us, we have the right to either sue IN PLACE OF the governing agents, prosecutors, agencies or depaertments, or take defensive measures which may lead into misinterpreted unconventional methods.

Reply to this comment
by ofbyfor3 December 13, 2008 2:41 PM EST
Get a good man and set up an offshore account, it''''s legal and will allow you to eliminate taxes. You are right though, if you aren''''t diligently paying attention, you can get dinged for sales tax and the like, but get into farming to be able to stop paying sales tax, fuel taxes. In my yacht I burn diesel which I put through the farm. At the end of the year I get a rebate so my yacht goes anywhere free.

Posted by HETUP at 10:26 AM : Dec 13, 2008


You are SUCH an obvious LYING TROLL!!!!!
Reply to this comment
by mrjustice1 December 13, 2008 12:33 PM EST
...IS IN THE AIR!
"LET THEM EAT CAKE!"

OUR LAWS MUST BE CHANGED AND DRASTICALLY

BUT, BUT, BUT...

So many of these parasitic ''investment bankers'' schemed, planned, and plotted, to take[as in licensed to steal] our hard-earned money, and make it disappear.

If our government, our politicians, lawyers, accountants, brokers and other ''financiers'' are ''in'' on all this, then it''s time to revolt.
Reply to this comment
by mrjustice1 December 13, 2008 12:02 PM EST
REDISTRIBUTE THE STOLEN WEALTH AND MONIES TO THE RIGHTFUL VICTIMS

These ''investment banker'' parasites must be brought to account for their PREMEDITATED, AND WElL-CALCULATED schemes, scams, and other swindles, which they did not procure by accident!

Confiscation of these ''investment bankers'' and of those similarly-titled ''financiers'' assets, lavish homes, monies, and other, would be an appropriate form of justice.

Let''s not forget to press for opening up, confiscating, and prohibiting all their offshore and their secret bank accounts in Switzerland, Cayman Islands, etc, where they retain the[OUR] and their victims'' stolen monies!
Reply to this comment
by debluezzman December 13, 2008 12:01 PM EST
Kind of funny, he makes a 10m dollar bail, with whos''s money, everything this man had should have been, frozen, including his brain, people like this should be taken out to the street and shot, they breath good air hard working people could be breathing.
Reply to this comment
by tbird6740 December 13, 2008 11:48 AM EST
Can somebody tell me WHERE ALL THAT $$$ went? It''s gotta be SOMEWHERE! Considering that Madoff BAILED OUT OF JAIL on $10M bond, (that''s TEN MILLION, folks) he''s gotta have some $$$$ SOMEWHERE! And how in the world does he get pinned with a measley $5M FINE? When he lost 50 BILLION? The numbers ain''t adding up here, people!!!!!!!! I also can''t help but wonder how many POLITICIANS invested with his firm?
Reply to this comment
by mrjustice1 December 13, 2008 11:47 AM EST
WE MUST PROSECUTE SUCH FRAUDULENT INVESTMENT BANKERS GLOBALLY.
HARSH NEW MEASURES, INCLUDING LENGHTY, HARD-LABOR PRISON TERMS, AND IN MANY, MANY CASES, EXECUTION FOR THE HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF LIVES TO WHOM THEY''VE BROUGHT FINACIAL RUIN, AND WHOSE FUTURES THEY''VE DESTROYED.

Reply to this comment
by ofbyfor3 December 13, 2008 11:42 AM EST
String him up!

What is wrong with people like this? He had ''more money than God'' and STILL it''s not enough! People like this should ALL end up in the soup line.

Better yet, let''s bring back the old practice of putting people in the stocks so they can be publicly humiliated. Whole different definition of ''stock'' than the one they''''re used to.
Reply to this comment
by slim1h2o December 13, 2008 9:37 AM EST
Welcome late to the ECONOMIC WORLD WAR people other nations have caught on years ago.

Posted by homespunlady at 01:57 AM : Dec 13, 2008

Only because they "felt" those effects yrs ago.
And so will we, it''s coming....


Reply to this comment
by hunterdon6 December 13, 2008 9:21 AM EST
This is just a tip of an iceberg. These people should not be sent to jail, but to an enclosed room with all the people who lost their money. Justice would then be served. Most CEO''s of the big companies are just as guilty of these type of fraud. Send them all to jail!
Reply to this comment
by oolongw December 13, 2008 6:22 AM EST
These big shot have no shame at all.
Reply to this comment
See all 58 Comments

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