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Madoff Victims' Lawsuit Against JPMorgan Chase Tossed

Madoff Victims Lawsuit

First Posted: 11/ 2/2011 8:41 am Updated: 01/ 2/2012 4:12 am

A federal judge threw out most of a $19.9 billion lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase & Co and a $2 billion case against UBS AG by the trustee seeking money for victims of epic swindler Bernard Madoff's fraud.

The decision by U.S. District Court Judge Colleen McMahon in Manhattan is one of the largest setbacks for the trustee, Irving Picard, who has spent nearly three years liquidating Bernard L Madoff Investment Securities LLC.

JPMorgan had been Madoff's main bank for two decades, and McMahon's decision wipes out about $19 billion of Picard's case against the largest U.S. bank.

"The trustee's theories fail," McMahon wrote in an opinion released on Tuesday.

She said Picard had no power to pursue common law claims against the banks, saying such claims properly belong to former Madoff customers. The judge returned what is left of the cases to the U.S. bankruptcy court in Manhattan.

Picard plans to appeal to the federal appeals court in New York, and remains "confident" in his claims and his standing to pursue them, spokeswoman Amanda Remus said in an email.

In concluding that Picard exceeded his power, McMahon followed a July decision by her colleague Jed Rakoff, who threw out about $8.6 billion of claims against HSBC Holdings Plc and other defendants.

JPMorgan spokeswoman Jennifer Zuccarelli and UBS spokeswoman Torie von Alt said their respective banks are pleased with the decision.

METS SETBACK

Picard has filed roughly 1,050 lawsuits on behalf of former Madoff customers since the now-imprisoned Ponzi schemer's firm collapsed on December 11, 2008.

The JPMorgan lawsuit has been his second-largest after a $58.8 billion case against defendants, including Bank Medici AG founder Sonja Kohn and Italy's UniCredit SpA .

Rakoff also handles that case. In September, he also capped potential damages in Picard's lawsuit against the owners of the New York Mets baseball team, who were also former Madoff customers, at $386 million, down from $1 billion.

In the HSBC case, Rakoff rejected what he called Picard's "convoluted theories," and accepted HSBC's arguments that the trustee could not pursue common law claims.

McMahon, in her decision, said she was "persuaded as well" by the essentially identical arguments raised by JPMorgan and UBS, and that the HSBC ruling "convincingly established" the trustee's lack of standing to pursue common law claims.

She likened Picard's position to that of a garage owner who trying to sue on behalf of a customer whose car got scratched while stuck in traffic, before it was parked in the garage.

"What interest could the garage possibly have in going after the stranger?" she wrote. "The garage would have no legal standing to vindicate that injury."

RED FLAGS

The bulk of Picard's cases are "clawback" lawsuits against former Madoff customers that Picard believes took too much cash out of the firm before its collapse.

In contrast, the lawsuits against JPMorgan, UBS, HSBC, UniCredit and "feeder funds" that steered client money to Madoff accused the defendants of ignoring red flags about Madoff's fraud, often to win more fees or commissions.

JPMorgan argued that Picard failed to show anyone at the bank had "actual knowledge" of Madoff's crimes, or "deliberately collaborated" with Madoff to win banking fees.

The trustee has said he has recovered roughly $8.7 billion to cover about $17.3 billion of valid customer claims. Madoff, 73, is serving a 150-year prison sentence.

The cases are Picard v. JPMorgan Chase & Co et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 11-00913; and Picard v. UBS AG et al in the same court, No. 11-04212.

(Reporting by Grant McCool and Jonathan Stempel; Editing by Tim Dobbyn, Andre Grenon and Richard Chang)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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A federal judge threw out most of a $19.9 billion lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase & Co and a $2 billion case against UBS AG by the trustee seeking money for victims of epic swindler Bernard Madoff'...
A federal judge threw out most of a $19.9 billion lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase & Co and a $2 billion case against UBS AG by the trustee seeking money for victims of epic swindler Bernard Madoff'...
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just11
occupy everywhere forever
01:29 AM on 11/03/2011
those who invested with madoff are mostly criminals too, now pretending to be victims, as usual.
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Dennis Higgins
08:24 PM on 11/02/2011
All the banks involved I believe, were involved. I'm not at all shocked the "Legal System" would back the banks instead of the people. When is the Gov't going to break up these "Too big to fail" crooks anyway! My guess is never. Like Enron the money gets spread out pretty good to a whole bunch of powerful people.
12:47 AM on 11/03/2011
I am not sure about all the banks but in the case of UBS, I understand that some rich Swiss customers begged UBS to find a way to have their money invested in the Maddoff fund. Now the same customers are suing UBS for not having done due diligence on Maddoff.
I have no sympathy for the investors or the banks.
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wesdfs
08:12 PM on 11/02/2011
common folks you know they all play golf together and r buddies with each other---if you have enough money you can buy who you want----they are a new mafia and as you can plainly see there is no justice or fairness anymore----you need to buy it-----and that is capitalizm at work
08:08 PM on 11/02/2011
The Picard shakedown express visiting a court room near you.

Let's go Met's!
07:27 PM on 11/02/2011
Bernie Madoff made a lot of money and also screwed a lot of people out of their money with his ponzi scheme. If you don't know about the Madoff Ponzi scheme, this article gives a great explanation on it.

http://explainlikeakid.blogspot.com/2011/10/bernie-madoffs-ponzi-scheme.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Baneblade
Better Left than wrong
06:17 PM on 11/02/2011
They should just duel. 20 paces, flintlock pistols, go.
05:07 PM on 11/02/2011
This Madoff stuf is all bad for the victims but I don't give a fudge for any of the family. The son is worried that the lawsuit against him will "rob" him of money that he should have put in the pile for victims as soon as he knew the gig was up. And, what's with Ruth keeping 2,500,000 when victims left with nothing but SS? Another BIG thing...Bernie was sent to jail for life and beyond but think of all the BIG BANKERS out there who have done the same to taxpayers and are not only, not in jail but giving themselves BIG bonuses to this day. Something smells and it is not sweet...more like a dead rat.
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madcityy
12:07 PM on 11/02/2011
this is all to insaneeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
10:57 AM on 11/02/2011
To the HP monitors..it should take you no time at all to post my comment..there was nothing in it against your rules..now get to it.
10:58 AM on 11/02/2011
Thank you.
10:57 AM on 11/02/2011
That the Madoffs look set to profit from this is just shocking. Here's my view: http://dasteepsspeaks.blogspot.com/2011/10/made-off-with-millions.html
10:55 AM on 11/02/2011
Harry Markopolos begged the SEC for years, to look into MADOFF...he is a brilliant financial analyst and realized Madoff was running a po**nzi scheme....and THE SEC IGNORED HIM....and NO ONE at the SEC was fired....oh, and one of the managers in the SEC was married into the MADOFF family. You all can connect the dots as you like.
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paid trawler
reply to me for a half penny
10:23 AM on 11/02/2011
what a ghastly toxic poison mess.
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runforfun54
09:21 AM on 11/02/2011
Let's just set the record straight here ... this is not a VICTIM's lawsuit. This is a lawsuit brought by the Trustee for the bankruptcy who continues his witch hunt against the small innocent investors. The Madoff Trustee works for SIPC ... despite his public relations to the contrary. Keep in mind that there are still THOUSANDS of people fighting lawsuits ... despite the Trustee's pr efforts indicating he wouldn't go after "grandma."

The SIPA law is clear - the Bankruptcy Trustee is supposed to pay SIPC insurance payments PROMPTLY, based on the final account statements. There is NOTHING in the law that makes distinctions by types of fraud; heck, the law was passed in 1970. Ponzi lived in the 20's; if they'd wanted to make exceptions, they would have. The SIPC payments come from a fund based on assessments to SIPC members -- and who are those members??? WALL STREET! There are ZERO taxpayer dollars at risk. So, yes, this is yet another attempt to protect Wall Street, by going after the little guys.

Madoff Investors and OWS - an Unlikely Alliance http://tinyurl.com/5swjoxr