Bernie Madoff, The Wizard of Lies

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by Diana B. Henriques




  Praise for Bernie Madoff, The Wizard of Lies

  “Henriques…offers a riveting history of Mr Madoff’s shady dealings and the shattering consequences of his theft.”

  The Economist

  “[Henriques] probably knows more than anyone outside the FBI and the Securities and Exchange Commission about the mechanics of the fraud. As a consequence, in [the book] she is able to add significant detail to the story.... In the end the story holds us not because of the engrossing details of the scam, but because of the human dimension.”

  The New York Times Book Review

  “Cogent and well researched, Bernie Madoff, The Wizard of Lies is an engaging narrative…. [The book] reveals many moments where Madoff might have been stopped. But his investors were too trusting or too greedy to ask the right questions and US regulators were too cowed and too disorganised.”

  Financial Times

  “Henriques has been granted an unprecedented level of access to Bernard Madoff… What could she uncover that we haven’t already heard? As it turns out, plenty. Henriques offers an impressive, meticulously reported postmortem not only of the Ponzi scheme but also of Madoff’s entire career.... The definitive book on what Madoff did and how he did it.”

  Bloomberg BusinessWeek

  “[Madoff] is so much like every one of us that failing to recognize this fact will imperil us at every financial turn. This is one of many revelations in Diana Henriques’ stunning new book... Masterful.”

  Reuters

  “Compelling.”

  The New York Times

  “[A] fascinating portrait… In this thoroughly researched and well-written account, Henriques skilfully manages to humanise Madoff without diminishing the monstrousness of his deeds.”

  Fort Worth Star-Telegram

  Also by Diana B. Henriques

  The White Sharks of Wall Street:

  Thomas Mellon Evans and the Original Corporate Raiders

  Fidelity’s World:

  The Secret Life and Public Power of the Mutual Fund Giant

  The Machinery of Greed:

  Public Authority Abuse and What to Do About It

  BERNIE MADOFF, THE WIZARD OF LIES

  BERNIE

  MADOFF,

  THE

  WIZARD

  OF LIES

  INSIDE THE INFAMOUS $65 BILLION SWINDLE

  DIANA B. HENRIQUES

  A Oneworld Book

  First published in Great Britain and the Commonwealth by Oneworld Publications 2011

  First published in the USA and Canada as The Wizard of Lies: Bernie Madoff and the Death of Trust by Times Books, 2011

  This ebook edition published by Oneworld Publications 2011

  Published by arrangement with Times Books, an imprint of Henry Holt and Company, LLC,

  175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010 USA.

  Copyright © 2011 by Diana B. Henriques

  The moral right of Diana B. Henriques to be identified as the Author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patent Act 1988

  All rights reserved

  Copyright under Berne Convention

  A CIP record for this title is available

  from the British Library

  ISBN 978-1-78074- 043-0

  Cover design by Dan Mogford

  Design by Meryl Sussman Levavi

  Oneworld Publications

  185 Banbury Road, Oxford, OX2 7AR, England

  Learn more about Oneworld. Join our mailing list to find out about our latest titles and special offers at:

  www.oneworld-publications.com

  For my colleagues at The New York Times,

  yesterday, today, and tomorrow;

  and for Larry,

  forever

  CONTENTS

  Cast of Characters

  Prologue

  1. An Earthquake on Wall Street

  2. Becoming Bernie

  3. The Hunger for Yield

  4. The Big Four

  5. The Cash Spigot

  6. What They Wanted to Believe

  7. Warning Signs

  8. A Near-Death Experience

  9. Madoff’s World

  10. The Year of Living Dangerously

  11. Waking Up in the Rubble

  12. Reckoning the Damage

  13. Net Winners and Net Losers

  14. The Sins of the Father

  15. The Wheels of Justice

  16. Hope, Lost and Found

  Epilogue

  Notes

  Acknowledgements

  Index

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  THE MADOFF FAMILY

  Bernie Madoff, founder of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities

  Ruth Madoff (née Alpern), his wife

  Mark Madoff, their elder son, born 1964

  Andrew Madoff, their younger son, born 1966

  Peter Madoff, Bernie Madoff’s younger brother

  Shana Madoff, his daughter

  Roger Madoff, his son

  Ralph Madoff, Bernie Madoff’s father

  Sylvia Madoff (née Muntner), Bernie Madoff’s mother

  AT BERNARD L. MADOFF INVESTMENT SECURITIES

  Eleanor Squillari, Bernie Madoff’s secretary

  Irwin Lipkin, Madoff’s first employee

  Daniel Bonventre, the director of operations

  Frank DiPascali, the manager on the seventeenth floor

  Jerome O’Hara, a computer programmer

  George Perez, his coworker and officemate

  David Kugel, an arbitrage trader

  THE ACCOUNTANTS

  Saul Alpern, Ruth Madoff’s father

  Frank Avellino, Alpern’s colleague and successor

  Michael Bienes, Avellino’s longtime partner

  Jerome Horowitz, an early Alpern partner and Madoff’s accountant

  David Friehling, Horowitz’s son-in-law and successor

  Paul Konigsberg, a Manhattan accountant

  Richard Glantz, a lawyer and the son of an early Alpern associate

  INDIVIDUAL INVESTORS AND “INTRODUCERS”

  Martin J. Joel Jr, a stockbroker in New York

  Norman F. Levy, a real estate tycoon in New York

  Carl Shapiro, a philanthropist in Palm Beach

  Robert Jaffe, his son-in-law

  Jeffry Picower, a secretive New York investor

  William D. Zabel, his longtime attorney

  Mendel “Mike” Engler, a stockbroker in Minneapolis

  Howard Squadron, a prominent Manhattan attorney

  Fred Wilpon, an owner of the New York Mets baseball team

  MAJOR US FEEDER FUNDS

  Stanley Chais, a Beverly Hills investor

  Jeffrey Tucker, a cofounder of Fairfield Greenwich Group

  Walter Noel Jr, his founding partner

  Mark McKeefry, the general counsel at Fairfield Greenwich

  Amit Vijayvergiya, the chief risk officer at Fairfield Greenwich

  J. Ezra Merkin, a prominent Wall Street investor

  Victor Teicher, his former adviser

  Sandra Manzke, a pension fund specialist

  Robert I. Schulman, her onetime partner

  INTERNATIONAL INVESTORS AND PROMOTERS

  Jacques Amsellem, a French investor

  Albert Igoin, a secretive financial adviser in Paris

  Patrick Littaye, a French hedge fund manager

  René-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet, his partner

  Sonja Kohn, a prominent Austrian banker and founder of Bank Medici

  Carlo Grosso, a manager of the Kingate fund, based in London

  Rodrigo Echenique Gordillo, a Banco Santander director in Madrid
<
br />   COHMAD SECURITIES

  Maurice J. “Sonny” Cohn, Bernie Madoff’s partner in this firm

  Marcia Beth Cohn, his daughter

  WHISTLE-BLOWERS

  Michael Ocrant, a writer for an elite hedge fund newsletter

  Erin Arvedlund, a freelance writer for Barron’s magazine

  Harry Markopolos, a quantitative analyst in Boston

  US SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION (SEC)

  Christopher Cox, chairman from August 2005 to January 2009

  Mary Schapiro, his successor as chairman

  H. David Kotz, their independent inspector general

  Grant Ward, a regional official in Boston

  Ed Manion, his coworker

  Lori Richards, a senior official in Washington

  Eric Swanson, a lawyer in Washington

  Andrew Calamari, a senior regional official in New York

  Meaghan Cheung, a lawyer in the New York office

  Simona Suh, her colleague

  William David Ostrow, an examiner in the New York office

  Peter Lamore, his colleague

  Lee S. Richards III, a New York lawyer in private practice, appointed as receiver for Madoff’s firm

  FAMILY LAWYERS

  Ira Lee “Ike” Sorkin, defence lawyer for Madoff

  Peter Chavkin, lawyer for Ruth Madoff

  Martin Flumenbaum, lawyer for Mark and Andrew Madoff

  FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION (FBI)

  Ted Cacioppi, special agent

  B. J. Kang, his colleague

  FEDERAL PROSECUTORS IN MANHATTAN

  Preet Bharara, US attorney for the Southern District of New York

  William F. Johnson, chief of the Securities and Commodities Fraud Task Force

  Marc Litt, the lead prosecutor in the Madoff case

  Lisa Baroni, his colleague

  SECURITIES INVESTOR PROTECTION CORPORATION (SIPC)

  Irving H. Picard, the trustee for the Madoff bankruptcy case

  David J. Sheehan, his chief legal counsel at Baker & Hostetler

  FEDERAL JUDGES IN MANHATTAN

  Louis L. Stanton, a district court judge

  Burton R. Lifland, a bankruptcy court judge

  Denny Chin, a district court judge

  Richard J. Sullivan, a district court judge

  VICTIMS’ ADVOCATES

  Helen Davis Chaitman, a lawyer in New Jersey

  Lawrence R. Velvel, a law school dean in Massachusetts

  Prologue

  TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 2010

  Glimpsed through the glass double doors at the end of a long prison hallway, he is not recognizable as the impassive hawk-faced man who was marched incessantly across television screens around the world less than two years ago. He seems smaller, diminished—just an elderly man in glasses talking deferentially to a prison official and looking a little anxious as he waits for the locked doors ahead of him to click open.

  Escorted by an associate warden, he steps from the sunshine of the prison’s sealed courtyard into the dim, cheaply panelled visiting room. The room would have fit easily into a corner of his former penthouse in Manhattan. Its furnishings consist entirely of faded plastic lawn furniture—red armless chairs around low tan tables—and it is illuminated today only by light from one large window and a row of vending machines.

  On most of his occasional visits to this room, it had been filled with prisoners and their families. But as he enters with his escort on this Tuesday morning, the room is empty except for his lawyer, a guard, and the visitor he has finally agreed to see. As the rules require, he sits facing the guard’s desk, where the associate warden settles down to wait. He unfolds a single sheet of ruled paper; it appears to be some handwritten notes and a few questions for his lawyer. He spreads the sheet out on the table in front of him.

  The creases in his tan short-sleeved shirt and trousers are knife-sharp, despite the humidity of this late summer morning. His hair is shorter, but it suits his slimmer frame. His black leather trainers are gleaming. Aside from a small spot where the brass plating on his belt buckle has worn away, he is as carefully groomed as ever. Even though he does not much resemble the heavier, better-dressed man shown so often in the news reports after his arrest, he still has a quiet magnetism that draws the eye.

  For more than two hours, he answers questions, sometimes with a direct gaze and sometimes with eyes that shift to the empty patio outside the window beside him. He is soft-spoken and intense, with occasional flashes of wit. He loses his composure just once, when he talks about his wife. Throughout, he seems unfailingly candid, earnest, and trustworthy.

  But then, he always does—even when he is lying. That is his talent and his curse. That is what enabled him to pull off the largest Ponzi scheme on record. That is what will enable him to spin the facts and obscure the truth about his crime for as long as he lives, if he chooses to do so.

  Bernard L. Madoff—Inmate Number 61727054—is the best-known prisoner currently held at the sprawling Federal Correctional Complex on the outskirts of Butner, North Carolina.

  The Butner-Creedmore exit on Interstate 85 does not announce that the prison is located here. There are no clearly marked signs within the little hamlet, just a few narrow black-and-white painted pointers at intersections, old-fashioned and easy to miss. The prison is not on the local map in the telephone book, so visitors have to ask the motel clerks for directions.

  The twisting route from the motorway involves urban-sounding byways like Thirty-third Street and E Street but is lined mostly with vine-blanketed trees and weed-strewn fields. The prison complex looms suddenly out of the pine woods on the right. It consists primarily of four large buildings set in a floodlit clearing among the lowland forests and fields.

  To the right, set slightly apart on the eastern edge of the property, is a minimum-security prison, the colour of manila folders and distinctively free of walls or fences. Almost hidden from view behind a thick stretch of trees to the left is a large modern prison hospital, whose separate entrance is farther along the two-lane road that meanders past the complex. And just visible up on a small wooded hill at the centre of the complex is a multi-storey medium-security prison clad in corrugated grey stone.

  Madoff is housed in a fourth facility on the Butner grounds, another medium-security prison to the left of the main entrance, down a short drive lined with flowering white crepe myrtle trees. The low grey-stone building is laid out like a giant game of dominoes. Except for its entry-way, it is completely surrounded by a double row of towering chain-link fences taller than the building itself. The encircling fences are lined with shimmering swirls of shiny razor wire. A watchtower stands at one corner of the large, nearly treeless exercise yard, and guards cruise the narrow roads winding through the complex, constantly alert for wandering prisoners or too-curious visitors.

  The unit’s cinder-block entryway is a low-ceilinged maze of security screening equipment, lockers for visitors’ belongings, pay phones, and offices. A set of locked doors leads into a sort of double airlock; the rear doors of each section are sealed before the doors ahead swing open. The last pair of doors opens into a wide white hallway leading to the visiting room. The corridor is immaculately clean and decorated, incongruously, with black-and-white Ansel Adams posters of big skies and wide-open spaces.

  The sense of impenetrable isolation descends as soon as the last set of doors thud shut. Mobile phones are out of reach, left in the lockers by the entryway. No written messages can be handed to the prisoner, who is constantly watched during visits. Without permission, not even a notebook can be carried into the visiting room; no tape recorders are allowed. Like laboratory rats or ants in a glass-walled colony, these prisoners are under constant scrutiny in a way few Westerners can fathom. Phone calls—collect calls only—are rationed and monitored. Letters are opened and read. Every human interaction is policed, regulated, constrained, limited, fettered—including this one.

  All media visits require the prisoner’
s invitation and the warden’s approval. After nearly a month of paperwork, the green light from the warden came with barely a week’s notice. The time allowed is limited, and that limit is politely enforced. (A follow-up visit will be authorized in February 2011. In the interval, Madoff will send along a note promising to mail his responses to any additional questions. He keeps his promise, sending several lengthy handwritten letters over the next few months and arranging to send short messages via the restricted and closely monitored prisoner e-mail system.)

  Until today, Madoff’s only visitor, apart from lawyers, has been his wife. Until now, he has not answered any independent questions about his crime except when standing in a courtroom, responding to a judge.

 

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