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Irving Picard: Madoff Firm Was Family's Piggy Bank

TOM HAYS   05/13/09 10:07 PM ET   AP

Madoff

NEW YORK — The credit card bill is a 30-page study in conspicuous consumption.

A quick scan shows a restaurant charge of more than $2,800, $2,000 in spending at a Parisian boutique and $441 at a gourmet bagel shop. There was $8,400 for one night at a hotel in Santa Monica and another $5,000 at the Montauk Yacht Club. The total amount due: more than $100,000.

Eye-popping numbers aside, the American Express statement from January 2008 has taken on broader meaning because of the notorious name on the corporate account: Bernard L. Madoff.

And the vast majority of the charges aren't even his; they belong to his family and associates.

The bill is among a pile of exhibits filed recently in a Manhattan bankruptcy court by Irving Picard, the court-appointed trustee who is dissecting Madoff's massive Ponzi scheme. Lawyers for the trustee claim in accompanying court papers that the credit card statement and other records prove Madoff's family used his clients' money to pay for homes, travel, fancy meals and other personal expenses.

The admitted swindler treated Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities "as his personal bank account, taking funds when he needed them and transferring funds to other Madoff entities or family members when it suited his whim and purposes," the lawyers wrote.

Since the money was so intertwined, Picard has argued to a Manhattan bankruptcy judge that it would be more efficient and economical to consolidate separate efforts to identify and liquidate Madoff's business and personal assets. A hearing is set for May 21.

The trustee has frozen Madoff's bank accounts, sold off legitimate portions of his business and filed lawsuits to reclaim ill-gotten gains. The money will be used to pay claims brought by thousands of burned investors.

Madoff, 70, pleaded guilty in March to charges that his secretive investment advisory operation was a multibillion-dollar fraud. He could spend the rest of his life in prison.

In his plea, Madoff took all the blame for the scheme. He tried to create a wall between himself and his family, saying the separate trading operations run by his brother and two sons were "legitimate, profitable and successful in all respects."

Federal investigators have said they don't believe that, but won't discuss how the investigation _ now in its fifth month _ is progressing. Lawyers for various family members and firm executives have denied any wrongdoing.

The trustee has stopped short of accusing anyone else of participating in perhaps the largest securities scheme in history. But in sometimes scathing language and in the most detail to date, his lawyers claim Madoff insiders were blatant beneficiaries.

Madoff used his firms in Manhattan "to siphon funds which were, in reality, other people's money, for his personal use and the benefit of his inner circle," the recent filing by trustee lawyers said. "Plain and simple, he stole it."

They accuse the Madoff's family of burning through hundreds of millions of dollars to cover their decadent lifestyle. Family members, the lawyers wrote, "used customer accounts as though they were their own."

The trustee's investigation has concluded that Madoff's boat captain, maid and house-sitter in Florida were on his firm's payroll. Since 1996, the business also paid nearly $1 million in fees and charges at high-end golf clubs on Long Island and in Florida.

Also purchased were two boats _ worth more than $11.5 million _ that "served no business purpose," court papers said. The records show that $11 million more was funneled to Madoff's sons to buy homes on the Upper East Side and on Nantucket, the trustee said.

Then there was the corporate credit card used by Madoff's family and close business associates.

Of the $100,121.99 bill from Jan. 23, 2008, Madoff's wife, Ruth, was the top spender, ringing up $29,887.94 in charges. They included a $2,000.01 purchase at a Giorgio Armani outlet in Paris, and $1,214.10 at a Diane Firsten shop in Cincinnati about a week later.

A sampling of the other charges: $584.96 for limousine service by son Mark; $521.82 at a New Jersey wine shop by employee JoAnn Crupi; and $441.00 at a gourmet bagel shop by brother Peter.

The bill provides a window into the lives of the Madoffs and their inner circle. A vacation to Jackson Hole, Wyo., over the holidays shows what seemed to be a lavish ski trip: They spent thousands at the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort, hundreds more for car rentals, and ate and drank at places like a Mexican restaurant where they rang up a $2,879 bill. They also ran up a $254.38 tab at the Nikai Sushi Bar, but they left a tip on the card of only $15.

They made several purchases at a bait shop in Florida, where the Madoffs and their associates went on fishing expeditions. Numerous charitable donations were made by Ruth Madoff.

The Madoffs also liked their restaurants, eating out at places such as the lavish Per Se in Manhattan, Outback Steakhouse and Bobby Vans Steakhouse. They paid for flights all over the country, made big purchases at the Apple store, had subscriptions to The New York Times and Wall Street Journal, went out to movies and rented some on Netflix.

The statement makes Bernard Madoff himself look miserly by comparison. He was charged only for an annual credit card membership fee and an airline tax.

The total: $470.

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NEW YORK — The credit card bill is a 30-page study in conspicuous consumption. A quick scan shows a restaurant charge of more than $2,800, $2,000 in spending at a Parisian boutique and $441 at ...
NEW YORK — The credit card bill is a 30-page study in conspicuous consumption. A quick scan shows a restaurant charge of more than $2,800, $2,000 in spending at a Parisian boutique and $441 at ...
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04:54 PM on 05/14/2009
Had the stock market not tanked, who knows how long Madoff, and Allen Stanford, and the other scammers could have continued stealing? If nothing else, the market crash injected some much-neede­d reality into the nonsense that is business "journalis­m." It also exposed the hypocrisy of CEOs who always praise the invisible hand of the free market, but when their companies lose billions, they ignore market signals and keep dipping their own hands into multi-mill­ion-dollar bonuses.
Now that taxpayers are paying those bonuses directly, they finally have to face some music, yet they keep playing deaf.
03:03 PM on 05/14/2009
Find where these crooks hid all the money, take it back,
and then, put all involved on trial and if found guilty
waterboard them, then throw them in jail.
01:37 PM on 05/14/2009
The man and his family live in NYC and have millions of dollars that they're obviously not unwilling to spend and they eat at an Outback Steakhouse­? WTF.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Artemis34
Mommy says the rich men need our food stamps.
12:55 PM on 05/14/2009
Another reason to seize the assets of the entire family. At least freeze them.

Don't want it to turn out like Ken Lay where the family gets to keep the plunder!
12:32 PM on 05/14/2009
OK the article said they ate at an Outback Steakhouse­. Is this like the same Outback Steakhouse that I eat at that are all over the country? This seems a little (no, a lot) below their usual lifestyle.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cdmatthews
South of Boston; @chrismatth on Twitter
11:41 AM on 05/14/2009
I work for a CPA and credit card statements like this are quite the norm - people always put their travel on the company card and then deduct it (at 50%)... The Armani expenses, etc. would never get by an accountant and would be deducted from Bernie's profits (part of his business was legal, so don't attack me!)

I think this is much-a-do about nothing! The tips don't matter - tip's are stupid to begin with, why don't we just pay the single mother-dom­inated field minimum wage so non-tipper­s don't matter. But a $15 tip on a $250+ bill? Well, it's a sushi bar. They sit at the bar and hand you the sushi right there, no need for a big tip. The chef is making it in front of you, and not getting paid waitstaff salary... He's a chef and making good money. It's like tipping the guys at the pizza shop after they rob you of $25 for a pizza - no need.
olddognewtrick
Half full or half empty...It's the same
11:39 AM on 05/14/2009
Of course they never did an honest days work. Why be a rube? There's no money in it.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
TXfemmom
Grandma with eye on the future
10:24 AM on 05/14/2009
It is obvious that the members of the family benefited from this scheme and since the tainted funds paid for the brother and his sons to have lavish homes, they should be seized. No more discussion needed.
10:23 AM on 05/14/2009
The ill-gotten gains from this ponzi scheme should be stripped from anyone who benefited from this crime.
If this was a drug cartel they'd all be broke and in jail.
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HoosierRadical
History is a relay of revolutions.
11:53 AM on 05/14/2009
So true.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aardvark13
09:14 AM on 05/14/2009
The tip part of this article is the most outrageous part. He steals the money and can't even pay someone that is trying to EARN a living.
02:28 PM on 05/14/2009
Absolutely the "tip part" of the article is the most disturbing­.

The people in the group spending the $250 should be ashamed of themselves­.

And where is the defender of this cheap tip from?
08:23 AM on 05/14/2009
I leave a $15 tip on a $50 dinner tab; they leave it on a $250 tab? So they have free lunches, dinners, shopping trips, hotel stays, etc., but they "economize­" by holding back on the tip? These people never did an honest day's work in their lives...
08:13 AM on 05/14/2009
The charges make Madoff look miserly? He had EVERYONE else, INCLUDING, his personal secretary, do his stealing. Lowest of the low. And, $441.00 for bagels?? His wife, his brother, his sons, throw them ALL in jail. Equally complicit.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LHoney
Life is short, seize the day!
07:45 AM on 05/14/2009
Ahhhh the rich... even with a free lunch, too cheap to pay the tip!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Colmore
07:35 AM on 05/14/2009
Did the Madoff's have a ZERO interest rate like the McCains have on their cards???
08:55 AM on 05/14/2009
Couldn't resist going negative?
06:56 AM on 05/14/2009
raise your hands anyone who is surprised by this.