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Citigroup Saw Madoff Fraud Warnings: Trustee Lawsuit

First Posted: 02/22/11 01:50 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:35 PM ET

Madoff Scandal
Bernard Madoff former chairman of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC

NEW YORK (By Grant McCool) - Citigroup Inc tried to pass on its exposure to Bernard Madoff to other banks just months before his epic fraud was revealed, the Madoff trustee said in a lawsuit accusing a second major U.S. bank of unsavory dealings with the financier.

Trustee Irving Picard said red flags about Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC were apparent to Citi as early as 2005, according to court papers unsealed on Monday. The lawsuit seeks $425 million from the bank.

Madoff was arrested in December 2008 after admitting he ran a decades-long, multibillion-dollar swindle, considered the biggest investment fraud in history.

Picard also has sued JPMorgan Chase & Co, Madoff's primary banker, for $6.4 billion, alleging the bank turned a blind eye as Madoff ran a Ponzi scheme.

Portions of both lawsuits were edited to conceal the names of bank personnel and others. The lawsuit against Citi was filed on December 8 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York.

It cited one email by a Citigroup Global Markets Ltd trader in September 2008 reaching out to another bank, which was unidentified.

"We're needing to terminate our Madoff trade. Do you have appetite for that risk over there?" the email said.

According to the court document, the other bank responded, "don't think so, madoff is not very popular here either."

Citi said in a statement on Tuesday that the allegations in the lawsuit were false and it would "vigorously defend against these claims."

Madoff, now 72, pleaded guilty in March 2009 to criminal charges of running a Ponzi scheme of as much as $50 billion. He is serving a 150-year prison sentence.

A Ponzi scheme is one in which early investors are paid with the money of new clients and no actual trading in shares takes place.

Picard is also suing the owners of the New York Mets professional baseball team over their ties to Madoff. They deny knowing about the fraud. The club plays at Citi Field, which is not a target of the litigation.

"By no later than June 2007, and likely several years earlier, Citi had knowledge of the possibility of Madoff's Ponzi scheme," Picard's complaint said.

The complaint said Citi could have noticed red flags as early as 2005. It cited a $300 million loan transaction that year for Prime Fund, part of Tremont Capital Management Inc, a so-called feeder fund for Madoff.

It said Citigroup personnel had an opportunity to meet and befriend Harry Markopolos, a financial analyst who later became famous because his warnings to regulators about Madoff were ignored.

So far, Picard and his team of lawyers have recovered about $10 billion. The trustee estimates that investors lost principal totaling about $20 billion.

Picard and his team have sued hundreds of individuals, banks and funds around the world that he asserts benefited improperly from the epic fraud.

The case is Irving Picard, trustee for the liquidation of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC v Citibank and Citigroup Global Markets Limited, U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, No. 10-05345.

(Reporting by Grant McCool; editing by John Wallace)

Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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NEW YORK (By Grant McCool) - Citigroup Inc tried to pass on its exposure to Bernard Madoff to other banks just months before his epic fraud was revealed, the Madoff trustee said in a lawsuit accusing...
NEW YORK (By Grant McCool) - Citigroup Inc tried to pass on its exposure to Bernard Madoff to other banks just months before his epic fraud was revealed, the Madoff trustee said in a lawsuit accusing...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KeithClark
21 year old rapper
12:12 PM on 02/24/2011
None of these articles surprise me...I won't some real news HP I'm about to hit up TMZ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GregCoyote
07:42 PM on 02/23/2011
Somebody working at a bank on Wall Street making millions was involved in a open fraud? Remarkable. My guess is that nobody but Bernie goes to jail.
06:21 AM on 02/23/2011
When the scandal broke out, only a few small investors went public about their losses etc. One wondered at the time where were all the hundreds of people involved in these transactions and what they had to say about it?
04:49 AM on 02/23/2011
They need to pay up to the investors in the scam. Scammers paying scammers-You gotta love it!
Pay Up!!
05:22 AM on 02/23/2011
Screw the investors. Pay the taxpayers who never received a DIME in profits from the scam
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Inkosi
The gods themselves rage aginst stupidity
10:19 AM on 02/24/2011
F&F - my feelings exactly - Wall Street pay back the 401(k)s, the pensions, the workers that you stole from. The people Madoff ripped off were smart, savvy, rich, people, unlike the trusting sheep led to slaughter by Wall Street.
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RubalKhali
Philosophy is the stray camel of the faithful
04:26 AM on 02/23/2011
Also involved in the law suits are the many Israeli 'charities' that profitted from Made-offs thefts.
http://ejewishphilanthropy.com/madoff-trustee-sues-jewish-groups/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
03:37 AM on 02/23/2011
NOTHING ON THE $TRILLION CRIMINALS AT GOLDMAN AND THE REST!
03:19 AM on 02/23/2011
Madoff and Stanford were thrown under the bus by the other Wall Street criminals to make us think that someone was actually going to pay for the biggest financial crime in history.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Motorgoon
02:02 AM on 02/23/2011
Is anyone surprised at this? Citi is a c0rrupt institution and will never see any formal charges against it.
12:57 AM on 02/23/2011
Madof ran all these billions of dollars through ONE checking account at Chase. Yet, using the Patriot act the Feds were able to find Elliot Spitzer moving $60,000 from one account to another. So there were a lot of people who knew and just hoped the check didn't stop on there watch.
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01:50 AM on 02/23/2011
The irony is just too much, the money was invested for the same purpose.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DARK STAR
One small step for Man...
12:51 AM on 02/23/2011
No way was he alone, he had help, whether it was his immediate family or not, he was helped and others need to get same sentence.
12:57 AM on 02/23/2011
Totally agree. There is much more to this than we are led to believe.
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WorldEdition
Speak Truth to Power
12:39 AM on 02/23/2011
THEY ALL KNEW!

It was impossible NOT to know.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Budwithcommonsense
12:30 AM on 02/23/2011
Did Maddoff have his own bank to move 50 billion dollars?
12:18 AM on 02/23/2011
Madoff is only a goldfish in that sea.
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WorldEdition
Speak Truth to Power
12:40 AM on 02/23/2011
absolutely right.

That's a big sea and the big fish run both parties.
12:10 AM on 02/23/2011
Of course they knew, Madoff was the scapegoat the msm needed to convince the public "someone" would pay for the banksters bad deals that we the people got the bill for,it's all a scam. meanwhile the sheeple spend their time bickering back and forth about the Dem's & Repub's, as if there's really any difference. when will we learn, unless you're a billionaire, you don't count. the SEC is worthless, they spend their time viewing internet porn.