Posted on 01/04/2009 3:10:18 AM PST by TigerLikesRooster
MADOFF VICTIMS' RE$CUE?
By JAMES DORAN
January 4, 2009 -- Angry victims of Bernie Madoff's alleged $50 billion Ponzi scheme want a bailout from Uncle Sam, too.
On the heels of Washington's $700 billion rescue of the nation's ailing banks and the $17.4 billion rescue of the auto industry, the Madoff victims are now calling on the US Treasury to augment the $1.6 billion in the coffers of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation - the organization set up to help victims of collapsed brokerages.
SIPC has pledged just $500,000 to each Madoff victim who had an open account with the fraudster's firm in the past 12 months - but that may not even come close to covering the Madoff losses, which are thus far estimated to be somewhere between $30 billion and $50 billion.
"What if it turns out that SIPC needs $15 billion to compensate all the victims because this fraud is bigger than anything they imagined could happen?" said Michael Sirota, a lawyer representing KML Investments, a firm that claims to have lost some $80 million to Madoff. "I think the US government should step up with funds to help like it has for the banking sector and the automotive sector."
"We desperately need to see the pool of assets we are working with and also the pool of losses," added Stuart Rich, a lawyer representing a group known as Jasper Investors that lost some $3 million to Madoff's scam, who also said Washington needs to step up to the plate with bailout money.
"SIPC has always been there to compensate victims in this kind of
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
I have a feeling its a distinctly one-way kind of socialism they're embracing.
He also paid higher than 10% returns. Apparently they were closer to 12% consistently.
Plus investors who made money on this scheme will have to give it back......under the legal doctrine of "fraudulent conveyance" meaning that investors who withdrew their money before the fraud was revealed, will be forced to return their profits or even part of their initial investments. Returning funds is mandatory for clients who knew Madoff's business was fraudulent.
=================================
Keep in in mind that the SEC received complaints ONLY from Madoff's competitors. Not one client ever filed a complaint...........
Now Bernies investors were savvy, astute successful business people, accustomed to constructing, picking apart and analyzing financial statements. One investor who spoke to reporters was a stockbroker (her family invested with Bernie for generations---the family's patriarch founded the wildly successful Stop and Shop supermarket chain). Other inevstors gave Madoff $100-500 millions to "invest" for years and years.
ORGANIZING LEGAL PRINCIPLE The following should foreclose any cockamamie ideas that taxpayers are gonna bailout these mega-millionaires (who most assuredly have money stashed offshore out of sight of the SEC and IRS).
The compelling legal principle of condonation is operating here---implied forgiveness for certain behavior. Meaning investors implicitly condoned Madoffs actions over a period of time--sometimes decades.
His investors willingly acquiesced to Madoff's activities in several ways:
(1) Sending Madoff enormous sums of money, sums that were spread out over time (some families invested for generations), even AFTER they had the opportunity to assess their investments;
(2) Referring other investors to Madoff (if the investment was so bad, why did they bring in other investors?);
(3) Taking profits out of the investment, rolling it over, or putting more money in;
(4) Writing PERSONAL checks to Madoff's subrosa spinoff vehicle that was not listed on the Securities Exchange (tax evasion modus);
(5) Accepting, without question, Madoffs obviously flawed monthly statements.
============================================
REFERENCE: by Ronald D. Orol, MarketWatch reporter, based in Washington.
EXCERPT There were several things that alerted some in the hedge-fund industry that an investment with Madoff may not have been as safe as it initially appeared. Aksia LLC, which researches hedge funds and advises institutions about investing in the industry, said that it never recommended that clients put money in some of the "feeder funds" that allocated their capital to Madoff. On the surface, these feeder funds looked like institutional-quality vehicles, but there were "a host of red flags," Aksia Chief Executive Jim Vos and colleague Jake Walthour wrote in a letter to clients after the Madoff scandal erupted last week.
The funds were marketed as using a "split-strike conversion" investment strategy that is "remarkably" simple, but the returns it purportedly generated could not be replicated by Aksia's quantitative analyst, Vos and Walthour wrote.
The Madoff funds supposedly traded in the Standard & Poor's 100 index options market, but that market is relatively small and may not have been able to handle trading by vehicles with roughly $13 billion in assets, they said. The feeder funds had almost all their assets custodied with Madoff Securities, the brokerage unit of Madoff's firm.
Aksia checked into the auditor of Madoff Securities and discovered it was a firm called Friehling & Horowitz, which had three employees -- one of whom was 78 years old and another was a secretary. The firm's office in upstate New York was 13 feet by 18 feet. Madoff's Web site claimed the firm was technologically-advanced, but it sent paper confirmations of trades via US mail at the end of each day, rather than providing electronic access to this important information.
Paper copies provide a hedge-fund manager with the end-of-the-day ability to manufacture trade tickets that confirm the investment results.
================================================
THEY HAD TO KNOW THIS WAS A SCAM. Bernies investors were savvy, astute successful business people, accustomed to picking apart and analyzing financial statements. WANT MORE PROOF? Bernie's "investors" were writing PERSONAL checks to Madoff's subrosa separate "investment" vehicle that was not listed on the Securities Exchange. This is clearly a money laundering, tax evasion modus.
The Securities Investor Protection Corp (receiver of Madoff's now-defunct fund) is examining Madoff's New York Mellon Bank accounts that appear to have sent and received money from offshore locations..........
Signicantly many of the entities invested with Madoff are tax-exempt non profit "charities and foundations"---which the IRS has labled as massive tax evasion schemes. Madoff might have manufactured falsified loss statements as a tax evasion ploy.
To pull off a $50 billion scheme, the Madoff cabal would have had to involve investors, relatives, associates, co-conspirators (or subsets of them), businesses and tax-exempt organizations........colluding together with similar goals like tax evasion and money laundering.
Madoff may have escaped scrutiny by routing his scheme through telephone lines with a maze of complex telecommunications' systems equipped with call-forwarding and voice mail systems, and numerous postal and commercial mail boxes..........and perhaps unregulated money-transfer systems that operate below the oversight radar in ethnic enclaves and places like NYC's Diamond District.
The "investment" monies could have been disguised (to evade the IRS) by routing through a network of domestic and international bank accounts using counterfeit checks.....opening commercial bank accounts in the name of bogus businesses and wire-transferring and/or depositing "investment" checks into those accounts.
The checks could have had invalid bank routing numbers, forged endorsements, or been drawn on the proceeds of other counterfeit checks deposited in other bank accounts. Before banks discovered the fraud, the funds might have been transferred out of the accounts probably offshore----leaving banks unable to recoup their losses.
State and federal tax authorities could have been swindled, if the scheme involved filing hundreds of phony tax returns in real or fictitious names, falsely claiming federal EITC credits (meant to benefit low-income earners).
In an international scheme with offshore ties, the co-conspirators or subsets of them might have obtained hundreds of taxpayer identification numbers for phantom citizens with worldwide addresses, and used the information, along with phony passports, to claim hundreds of bogus tax refunds.
Investigators poring over Madoff's books have discovered he routinely falsified documents. Using classic fraud techniques, Madoff kept two (or more) sets of books. One set keeps track of losses at Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC's (his investment advisory arm), while the other set of books is what investors were shown.
NOTE The SIPC is financed by the securities industry and hands out reimbursements to investors who lost money through LEGIT brokerages. It was not intended to reimburse individuals involved in shady schemes with people like Madoff.
The problem is when politics get involved.
Then rational thought is not a prerequisite...
So will they bail out the investors even the evidence that most of them knew it was a fraud?
These people are very, very shrewd....they got millions to “invest” not b/c they are nice guys but b/c they know how to work the system.
Madoff is a racketeer of the first rank.....and most all the “investors” know it. Madoff escaped scrutiny for years——and had plenty of help.........his “investors.”
Please note that some of the individuals and charities may have invested through funds, such as Ascot Partners, so there may be some double-counting going on.
Madoff Investor |
Investor Type |
Potential Exposure |
Source |
Access International Advisors |
hedge fund |
$1.4 billion |
|
Alicia Koplowitz |
individual |
$13.7 million |
Europa Press |
Allegretto Fund |
hedge fund |
$790,000 |
firm statement |
American Friends of Yad Sarah |
charity |
$1.5 million |
JTA |
Aozora Bank |
bank |
$137 million |
firm statement |
Aquila Capital Select 3 Zertifikat |
fund of hedge funds |
$2.52 million |
fund documents |
Arnold and Joan Sinkin |
individuals |
$1 million |
The Guardian |
Arthur I. and Sydelle F. Meyer Charitable Foundation |
charity |
$29.2 million |
Palm Beach Post |
Ascot Partners (Madoff feeder fund) |
hedge fund |
$1.8 billion |
Wall Street Journal |
Austin Capital Management |
fund of hedge funds |
n/a |
Reuters |
Avram and Carol Goldberg (Stop n Shop founders) |
individuals |
n/a |
Reuters |
AWD |
financial services provider |
n/a |
Citywire |
AXA |
insurer less than |
$135 million |
Reuters |
Baloise |
insurer |
$13 million |
Reuters |
Banca March |
bank |
$2.7 million |
Cinco Días |
Banco Popolare |
bank |
n/a |
MarketWatch |
Banesto |
bank |
n/a |
Reuters |
Bank Austria |
bank |
$192.1 million |
Der Standard |
Bank Medici of Austria |
bank |
$2.1 billion |
Bloomberg |
Banque Benedict Hentsch |
bank |
$47.5 million |
firm statement |
Barbara Flood |
individual |
n/a |
National Public Radio |
BBVA |
bank |
$404 million |
Reuters |
Benbassat & Cie |
bank |
$935 million |
Le Temps |
Bloomberg Fortis Bank Nederland |
bank |
$1.35 billion |
firm statement |
BNP Paribas |
bank |
$475.3 million |
Bloomberg |
Bramdean Asset Management |
alternatives firm |
$31 million |
WSJ |
Caisse des dépôts et consignations |
government-owned bank |
$1.38 million |
Bloomberg |
Caja Madrid |
bank |
$3.1 million |
Cinco Días |
Carl and Ruth Shapiro |
individuals |
$400 million |
WSJ |
Carl and Ruth Shapiro Family Foundation |
charity |
$145 million |
Boston Globe |
Chair Family Foundation |
charity |
n/a |
FINalternatives |
Chais Family Foundation |
charity |
$7 million |
WSJ |
Clal Insurance |
insurer |
$778,800 |
firm statement |
Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun (New York) |
synagogue |
$3.5 million |
Bloomberg |
Credit Mutuel |
bank |
$124 million |
Bloomberg |
David Berger |
individual |
$5 million |
FINalternatives |
Dexia |
bank |
$106.9 million |
firm statement |
Dorset County Pension Fund |
pension |
$3.5 million |
LocalGov.co.uk |
Ed Blumenfeld (Long Island real estate developer) |
individual |
n/a |
Long Island Business News |
EIM Group |
bank |
$230 million |
Le Temps |
Engelbardt family |
family office |
n/a |
Variety |
Eric Roth (screenwriter) |
individual |
n/a |
Los Angeles Times |
Erste Bank |
bank |
n/a |
Der Standard |
Fair Food Foundation |
charity |
n/a |
Crain's Detroit Business |
Fairfield Sentry (Fairfield Greenwich Group) |
(Madoff feeder fund) alternatives firm |
$7.5 billion |
firm statement |
family of former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer |
individuals |
n/a |
Clusterstock.com |
family of Sarah Chew |
family office |
$30 million |
Time |
FIM Ltd. (Kingate funds manager) |
money manager |
$3.5 billion |
media reports |
Fix Asset Management |
alternatives firm |
$400 million |
firm statement |
Foundation for Humanity (Elie Wiesel's charity) |
charity |
n/a |
WSJ |
Global Specialised Opportunities 1 Bermuda-listed |
fund |
$2.8 million |
fund statement |
Great Eastern Holdings |
bank |
$43.9 million |
Reuters |
Groupama |
insurer |
$13.6 million |
firm statement |
Grupo Santander |
bank |
$3.5 billion |
El Pais |
Gutmann |
bank |
n/a |
Citywire |
Hadassah |
charity |
$90 million |
JTA |
Hampshire County Council |
pension |
$10.7 million |
IPE |
Harel Insurance Investments and Financial Services |
insurer |
$14.2 million |
firm statement |
Harold Roitenberg |
individual |
$1 million |
Minneapolis Star-Tribune |
HSBC |
bank |
$1 billion |
firm statement |
Hyposwiss |
bank |
$50 million |
Reuters |
INTAC Global Preservation Hedge Portfolio (via Rye Investment Management) |
fund of hedge funds |
n/a |
fund documents |
Ira Rennert |
individual |
$200 million |
FINalternatives |
Ira Roth |
individual |
$1 million |
WSJ |
Irwin Kellner (named plaintiff on first lawsuit against Madoff) |
individual |
$6 million |
Lawsuit |
J.P. Jeanneret Associates |
investment adviser |
$946 million |
Syracuse Post-Standard |
Jeff Tucker (Stone Bridge horse farm owner, Fairfield Greenwich Group founding partner) |
individual |
n/a |
WNYT television |
JEHT Foundation |
charity |
n/a |
Statement |
Jerome Fisher (Nine West founder) |
individual |
$150 million |
media reports |
Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles |
charity |
$6.4 million |
media reports |
Joyce Z. Greenberg |
individuals |
n/a |
Houston Chronicle |
Julian J. Levitt Foundation |
charity |
$6 million |
WSJ |
Kas Bank |
bank |
$12.3 million |
firm statement |
KBC |
bank |
n/a |
firm statement |
Kenneth and Jeanne Levy-Church (donors to Fair Food and JEHT foundations) |
individuals |
n/a |
Jewish Journal |
Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick (actors) |
individuals |
n/a |
New York magazine |
Kingate Management (Madoff feeder fund) |
alternatives firm |
$2.8 billion |
Bloomerg |
Knowsley MBC |
pension |
n/a |
LocalGov.co.uk |
Korea Life Insurance Co. |
insurer |
$50 million |
Yonhap News |
Korea Teachers Pension |
pension |
$9.1 million |
Statement |
KSM Capital Advisors |
investment firm |
$15 million |
Indianapolis Business Journal |
Last Atlantis Capital Managament |
fund of hedge funds |
n/a |
fund documents |
Lautenberg Family Foundation |
charity |
$12.8 million |
media reports |
Lawrence Velvel (dean, Massachusetts Law School) |
individual |
n/a |
WSJ |
Leonard Feinstein (Bed Bath & Beyond co-founder) |
individual |
n/a |
Newark Star-Ledger |
Leonard Litwin |
individual |
n/a |
Bloomberg |
Liverpool City Council |
pension |
n/a |
LocalGov.co.uk |
LLBW |
bank |
n/a |
Citywire |
Loeb family |
family office |
n/a |
CNBC |
Los Angeles Jewish Community Foundation |
charity |
$18 million |
Jewish Journal |
M&B Capital Partners |
money manager |
$187.9 million |
El Mundo |
Madoff Family Foundation |
charity |
$19 million |
WSJ |
Maimonides School (Boston) |
school |
$5 million |
Bloomberg |
Massachusetts Pension Reserves Investment Management |
pension |
$12 million |
Reuters |
Maxam Capital Management (Madoff feeder fund) |
fund of hedge funds |
$280 million |
WSJ |
Mediobanca |
bank |
$671,000 |
firm statement |
Members of the Hillcrest Country Club (St. Paul, Minn.) |
individuals |
n/a |
Star-Tribune |
members of the Oak Ridge Country Club (Hopkins, Minn.) |
individuals |
n/a |
Star-Tribune |
Merseyside Pension Fund |
pension |
$3 million |
media reports |
Michael Roth |
individual |
$7.5 million |
FINalternatives |
Mirabaud & Cie |
bank |
n/a |
Le Temps |
Mitsubishi UFJ FInancial Group |
financial institution |
$11 million |
Bloomberg |
MorseLife |
charity |
n/a |
Palm Beach Post |
Mortimer B. Zuckerman Charitable Remainder Trust (New York Daily News owner's charity) |
charity |
$30 million |
CNBC |
Natixis |
bank |
$600 million |
Bloomberg |
Neue Privat Bank |
bank |
$5 million |
Bloomberg |
New York Law School |
law school |
$3 million |
Lawsuit |
Nomura |
bank |
n/a |
WSJ |
Nordea |
bank |
$65 million |
Reuters |
Normal Holdings |
. |
$302 million |
StreetInsider.com |
Norman Braman (former Philadelphia Eagles owner) |
individual |
n/a |
WSJ |
North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System |
pension fund |
$5 million |
statement |
Notz, Stucki & Cie |
bank |
n/a |
Le Temps |
Optimal Investment Services (Grupo Santander) |
alternatives firm |
n/a |
Bloomerg |
Palm Beach Country Club |
country club |
n/a |
CNBC |
Pioneer Alternative Investments |
alternatives firm |
$280 million |
Bloomberg |
RAB Capital hedge |
fund |
$10 million |
Reuters |
Reichmuth Matterhorn |
bank |
$330 million |
Bloomberg |
Richard Roth |
individual |
$10 million |
FINalternatives |
Richard Spring |
individual |
$11 million |
WSJ |
RMF (Man Group) |
alternatives firm |
$360 million |
firm statement |
Robert and Sarah Chew |
individual |
$1.2 million |
Time |
Robert I. Lappin Charitable Foundation |
charity |
$8 million |
Washington Post |
Roger Peskin |
individual |
$3 million |
AP |
Royal Bank of Canada |
bank |
$40.4 million |
Globe and Mail |
Royal Bank of Scotland |
bank |
$600 million |
published reports |
Royal Dutch Shell |
pension |
$45 million |
Reuters |
Rye Investment Management (Tremont Group) (Madoff feeder fund) |
hedge fund |
$3.1 billion |
Bloomerg News |
SAR Academy (New York) |
school |
$1.2 million |
Bloomberg News |
Sefton MBC |
pension |
n/a |
LocalGov.co.uk |
SNL Reaal Groep |
financial services firm |
n/a |
Bloomberg |
Societe General |
financial institution |
less than $13.5 million |
Reuters |
St. Helens MBC |
pension |
n/a |
LocalGov.co.uk |
Stephen Fine |
individual |
n/a |
Reuters |
Sterling Equities |
investment firm |
$500 million |
New York Post |
Steven Abbott |
individual less than |
$1 million |
WSJ |
Stony Brook University Foundation |
university endowment |
$5.4 million |
Bloomberg |
Sumitomo Life Insurance Co. |
insurer |
$22 million |
Bloomberg |
Swiss Reinsurance Co. |
reinsurer |
less than $3 million |
firm statement |
Symphony Fund (via Pioneer Alternative Investments) |
fund of hedge funds |
n/a |
fund documents |
Technion-Israel Institute of Technology |
university |
$6.4 million |
Globes |
The Moriah Fund |
charity |
n/a |
FINalternatives |
The Phoenix Holdings |
insurer |
$15 million |
firm statement |
The Ramaz School |
school |
$6 million |
FINalternatives |
Thema (Madoff feeder fund) |
hedge fund |
n/a |
media reports |
Thyssen family |
family office |
n/a |
Clusterstock.com |
Town of Fairfield, Conn. |
pension fund |
$42 million |
Associated Press |
Tremont Capital Management (Tremont Group) |
fund of hedge funds |
$190 million |
firm statement |
UBS |
bank |
n/a |
Reuters |
UniCredit |
financial firm |
$100 million |
Bloomberg |
Union Bancaire Privee |
bank |
$846 million |
Le Temps |
Unione di Banche Italiane |
bank |
$84.9 million |
Bloomberg |
United Jewish Endowment Fund |
charity |
less than $10 million |
JTA |
Victor Schlesinger |
Trust |
$61 Million |
WSJ |
Victor Schlesinger, Brooklyn NY T |
Trust |
$61 Million |
WSJ |
Vincent Tchenguiz |
individual |
$6.3 million |
FINalternatives |
Wilpon family (New York Mets owner) |
family office |
n/a |
WSJ |
Wolosoff Foundation |
charity |
$38 million |
FINalternatives |
Wunderkinder Foundation (Steven Spielberg's charity) |
charity |
n/a |
WSJ |
Yeshiva University |
university endowment |
$140 million |
Bloomberg |
Did you make that table? Very nice.
Yes. I’m a technical writer and I do a lot of desktop publishing. :) Thanks!
I’ll have to remember where this is, in case I need it later.
See post 69.
http://www.thedeal.com/dealscape/2008/12/madoffs_victims_list_reportedl.php
Some guy named “Joe Heller” has posted that info in a few places. You can see this in the above URL. I actually got same info from his post on another site. And it was totally unformatted. Unlike the one above
That is how I posted it here. One big blob. But you formatted it into table form which is great
I’m just curious. Where you able to automate the making of that table? My crude way of doing it would be to chop the blob into one line for each Madoff victim. Done on MS Frontpage. Then save it and open up the page I created. Open with IE
I would then make a four column table (like yours) with 50 rows to start. Then drag and drop the part of each victim’s line that goes into the correct column of new table. This can also be done with Word
I am posting your table so I can see it for quick reference under my “user posts”
Please note that some of the individuals and charities may have invested through funds, such as Ascot Partners, so there may be some double-counting going on.
(from freeper "TenthAmendmentChampion"
Madoff Investor |
Investor Type |
Potential Exposure |
Source |
Access International Advisors |
hedge fund |
$1.4 billion |
|
Alicia Koplowitz |
individual |
$13.7 million |
Europa Press |
Allegretto Fund |
hedge fund |
$790,000 |
firm statement |
American Friends of Yad Sarah |
charity |
$1.5 million |
JTA |
Aozora Bank |
bank |
$137 million |
firm statement |
Aquila Capital Select 3 Zertifikat |
fund of hedge funds |
$2.52 million |
fund documents |
Arnold and Joan Sinkin |
individuals |
$1 million |
The Guardian |
Arthur I. and Sydelle F. Meyer Charitable Foundation |
charity |
$29.2 million |
Palm Beach Post |
Ascot Partners (Madoff feeder fund) |
hedge fund |
$1.8 billion |
Wall Street Journal |
Austin Capital Management |
fund of hedge funds |
n/a |
Reuters |
Avram and Carol Goldberg (Stop n Shop founders) |
individuals |
n/a |
Reuters |
AWD |
financial services provider |
n/a |
Citywire |
AXA |
insurer less than |
$135 million |
Reuters |
Baloise |
insurer |
$13 million |
Reuters |
Banca March |
bank |
$2.7 million |
Cinco Días |
Banco Popolare |
bank |
n/a |
MarketWatch |
Banesto |
bank |
n/a |
Reuters |
Bank Austria |
bank |
$192.1 million |
Der Standard |
Bank Medici of Austria |
bank |
$2.1 billion |
Bloomberg |
Banque Benedict Hentsch |
bank |
$47.5 million |
firm statement |
Barbara Flood |
individual |
n/a |
National Public Radio |
BBVA |
bank |
$404 million |
Reuters |
Benbassat & Cie |
bank |
$935 million |
Le Temps |
Bloomberg Fortis Bank Nederland |
bank |
$1.35 billion |
firm statement |
BNP Paribas |
bank |
$475.3 million |
Bloomberg |
Bramdean Asset Management |
alternatives firm |
$31 million |
WSJ |
Caisse des dépôts et consignations |
government-owned bank |
$1.38 million |
Bloomberg |
Caja Madrid |
bank |
$3.1 million |
Cinco Días |
Carl and Ruth Shapiro |
individuals |
$400 million |
WSJ |
Carl and Ruth Shapiro Family Foundation |
charity |
$145 million |
Boston Globe |
Chair Family Foundation |
charity |
n/a |
FINalternatives |
Chais Family Foundation |
charity |
$7 million |
WSJ |
Clal Insurance |
insurer |
$778,800 |
firm statement |
Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun (New York) |
synagogue |
$3.5 million |
Bloomberg |
Credit Mutuel |
bank |
$124 million |
Bloomberg |
David Berger |
individual |
$5 million |
FINalternatives |
Dexia |
bank |
$106.9 million |
firm statement |
Dorset County Pension Fund |
pension |
$3.5 million |
LocalGov.co.uk |
Ed Blumenfeld (Long Island real estate developer) |
individual |
n/a |
Long Island Business News |
EIM Group |
bank |
$230 million |
Le Temps |
Engelbardt family |
family office |
n/a |
Variety |
Eric Roth (screenwriter) |
individual |
n/a |
Los Angeles Times |
Erste Bank |
bank |
n/a |
Der Standard |
Fair Food Foundation |
charity |
n/a |
Crain's Detroit Business |
Fairfield Sentry (Fairfield Greenwich Group) |
(Madoff feeder fund) alternatives firm |
$7.5 billion |
firm statement |
family of former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer |
individuals |
n/a |
Clusterstock.com |
family of Sarah Chew |
family office |
$30 million |
Time |
FIM Ltd. (Kingate funds manager) |
money manager |
$3.5 billion |
media reports |
Fix Asset Management |
alternatives firm |
$400 million |
firm statement |
Foundation for Humanity (Elie Wiesel's charity) |
charity |
n/a |
WSJ |
Global Specialised Opportunities 1 Bermuda-listed |
fund |
$2.8 million |
fund statement |
Great Eastern Holdings |
bank |
$43.9 million |
Reuters |
Groupama |
insurer |
$13.6 million |
firm statement |
Grupo Santander |
bank |
$3.5 billion |
El Pais |
Gutmann |
bank |
n/a |
Citywire |
Hadassah |
charity |
$90 million |
JTA |
Hampshire County Council |
pension |
$10.7 million |
IPE |
Harel Insurance Investments and Financial Services |
insurer |
$14.2 million |
firm statement |
Harold Roitenberg |
individual |
$1 million |
Minneapolis Star-Tribune |
HSBC |
bank |
$1 billion |
firm statement |
Hyposwiss |
bank |
$50 million |
Reuters |
INTAC Global Preservation Hedge Portfolio (via Rye Investment Management) |
fund of hedge funds |
n/a |
fund documents |
Ira Rennert |
individual |
$200 million |
FINalternatives |
Ira Roth |
individual |
$1 million |
WSJ |
Irwin Kellner (named plaintiff on first lawsuit against Madoff) |
individual |
$6 million |
Lawsuit |
J.P. Jeanneret Associates |
investment adviser |
$946 million |
Syracuse Post-Standard |
Jeff Tucker (Stone Bridge horse farm owner, Fairfield Greenwich Group founding partner) |
individual |
n/a |
WNYT television |
JEHT Foundation |
charity |
n/a |
Statement |
Jerome Fisher (Nine West founder) |
individual |
$150 million |
media reports |
Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles |
charity |
$6.4 million |
media reports |
Joyce Z. Greenberg |
individuals |
n/a |
Houston Chronicle |
Julian J. Levitt Foundation |
charity |
$6 million |
WSJ |
Kas Bank |
bank |
$12.3 million |
firm statement |
KBC |
bank |
n/a |
firm statement |
Kenneth and Jeanne Levy-Church (donors to Fair Food and JEHT foundations) |
individuals |
n/a |
Jewish Journal |
Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick (actors) |
individuals |
n/a |
New York magazine |
Kingate Management (Madoff feeder fund) |
alternatives firm |
$2.8 billion |
Bloomerg |
Knowsley MBC |
pension |
n/a |
LocalGov.co.uk |
Korea Life Insurance Co. |
insurer |
$50 million |
Yonhap News |
Korea Teachers Pension |
pension |
$9.1 million |
Statement |
KSM Capital Advisors |
investment firm |
$15 million |
Indianapolis Business Journal |
Last Atlantis Capital Managament |
fund of hedge funds |
n/a |
fund documents |
Lautenberg Family Foundation |
charity |
$12.8 million |
media reports |
Lawrence Velvel (dean, Massachusetts Law School) |
individual |
n/a |
WSJ |
Leonard Feinstein (Bed Bath & Beyond co-founder) |
individual |
n/a |
Newark Star-Ledger |
Leonard Litwin |
individual |
n/a |
Bloomberg |
Liverpool City Council |
pension |
n/a |
LocalGov.co.uk |
LLBW |
bank |
n/a |
Citywire |
Loeb family |
family office |
n/a |
CNBC |
Los Angeles Jewish Community Foundation |
charity |
$18 million |
Jewish Journal |
M&B Capital Partners |
money manager |
$187.9 million |
El Mundo |
Madoff Family Foundation |
charity |
$19 million |
WSJ |
Maimonides School (Boston) |
school |
$5 million |
Bloomberg |
Massachusetts Pension Reserves Investment Management |
pension |
$12 million |
Reuters |
Maxam Capital Management (Madoff feeder fund) |
fund of hedge funds |
$280 million |
WSJ |
Mediobanca |
bank |
$671,000 |
firm statement |
Members of the Hillcrest Country Club (St. Paul, Minn.) |
individuals |
n/a |
Star-Tribune |
members of the Oak Ridge Country Club (Hopkins, Minn.) |
individuals |
n/a |
Star-Tribune |
Merseyside Pension Fund |
pension |
$3 million |
media reports |
Michael Roth |
individual |
$7.5 million |
FINalternatives |
Mirabaud & Cie |
bank |
n/a |
Le Temps |
Mitsubishi UFJ FInancial Group |
financial institution |
$11 million |
Bloomberg |
MorseLife |
charity |
n/a |
Palm Beach Post |
Mortimer B. Zuckerman Charitable Remainder Trust (New York Daily News owner's charity) |
charity |
$30 million |
CNBC |
Natixis |
bank |
$600 million |
Bloomberg |
Neue Privat Bank |
bank |
$5 million |
Bloomberg |
New York Law School |
law school |
$3 million |
Lawsuit |
Nomura |
bank |
n/a |
WSJ |
Nordea |
bank |
$65 million |
Reuters |
Normal Holdings |
. |
$302 million |
StreetInsider.com |
Norman Braman (former Philadelphia Eagles owner) |
individual |
n/a |
WSJ |
North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System |
pension fund |
$5 million |
statement |
Notz, Stucki & Cie |
bank |
n/a |
Le Temps |
Optimal Investment Services (Grupo Santander) |
alternatives firm |
n/a |
Bloomerg |
Palm Beach Country Club |
country club |
n/a |
CNBC |
Pioneer Alternative Investments |
alternatives firm |
$280 million |
Bloomberg |
RAB Capital hedge |
fund |
$10 million |
Reuters |
Reichmuth Matterhorn |
bank |
$330 million |
Bloomberg |
Richard Roth |
individual |
$10 million |
FINalternatives |
Richard Spring |
individual |
$11 million |
WSJ |
RMF (Man Group) |
alternatives firm |
$360 million |
firm statement |
Robert and Sarah Chew |
individual |
$1.2 million |
Time |
Robert I. Lappin Charitable Foundation |
charity |
$8 million |
Washington Post |
Roger Peskin |
individual |
$3 million |
AP |
Royal Bank of Canada |
bank |
$40.4 million |
Globe and Mail |
Royal Bank of Scotland |
bank |
$600 million |
published reports |
Royal Dutch Shell |
pension |
$45 million |
Reuters |
Rye Investment Management (Tremont Group) (Madoff feeder fund) |
hedge fund |
$3.1 billion |
Bloomerg News |
SAR Academy (New York) |
school |
$1.2 million |
Bloomberg News |
Sefton MBC |
pension |
n/a |
LocalGov.co.uk |
SNL Reaal Groep |
financial services firm |
n/a |
Bloomberg |
Societe General |
financial institution |
less than $13.5 million |
Reuters |
St. Helens MBC |
pension |
n/a |
LocalGov.co.uk |
Stephen Fine |
individual |
n/a |
Reuters |
Sterling Equities |
investment firm |
$500 million |
New York Post |
Steven Abbott |
individual less than |
$1 million |
WSJ |
Stony Brook University Foundation |
university endowment |
$5.4 million |
Bloomberg |
Sumitomo Life Insurance Co. |
insurer |
$22 million |
Bloomberg |
Swiss Reinsurance Co. |
reinsurer |
less than $3 million |
firm statement |
Symphony Fund (via Pioneer Alternative Investments) |
fund of hedge funds |
n/a |
fund documents |
Technion-Israel Institute of Technology |
university |
$6.4 million |
Globes |
The Moriah Fund |
charity |
n/a |
FINalternatives |
The Phoenix Holdings |
insurer |
$15 million |
firm statement |
The Ramaz School |
school |
$6 million |
FINalternatives |
Thema (Madoff feeder fund) |
hedge fund |
n/a |
media reports |
Thyssen family |
family office |
n/a |
Clusterstock.com |
Town of Fairfield, Conn. |
pension fund |
$42 million |
Associated Press |
Tremont Capital Management (Tremont Group) |
fund of hedge funds |
$190 million |
firm statement |
UBS |
bank |
n/a |
Reuters |
UniCredit |
financial firm |
$100 million |
Bloomberg |
Union Bancaire Privee |
bank |
$846 million |
Le Temps |
Unione di Banche Italiane |
bank |
$84.9 million |
Bloomberg |
United Jewish Endowment Fund |
charity |
less than $10 million |
JTA |
Victor Schlesinger |
Trust |
$61 Million |
WSJ |
Victor Schlesinger, Brooklyn NY T |
Trust |
$61 Million |
WSJ |
Vincent Tchenguiz |
individual |
$6.3 million |
FINalternatives |
Wilpon family (New York Mets owner) |
family office |
n/a |
WSJ |
Wolosoff Foundation |
charity |
$38 million |
FINalternatives |
Wunderkinder Foundation (Steven Spielberg's charity) |
charity |
n/a |
WSJ |
Yeshiva University |
university endowment |
$140 million |
Bloomberg |
Bob Dole used to carry a pocket Constitution and whip it out and point to the Tenth. My guess is that in his early years he really meant it but later on it became a rhetorical flourish because he was a big Federal Government guy though not as bad as others. He voted for tons of bills that usurped the rightful domain of the states and counties
Here are the steps I used to make this table:
Copied the blob into Word.
Looked for patterns of repetition to make sense of the information.
Saw the dollar signs, did a search and replace for those from “$” to “^t$”
Put a hard return after each incidence of the phrase “illion” by searching for it and replacing with “illion ^p”
Manually entered tab symbols after each name and fund type
Created the table by converting it in the Table/Convert dialog box.
Did quite a bit of drag and drop due to the way the data was formatted. I did miss one source, the very first line was credited to Bloomberg which is down on the line for Fortis. I fixed that after posting, of course.
Sorted the table on the first field.
Saved as HTML.
Opened the file in a browser.
Used View/Source to see the HTML formatting, copied that and pasted it into the posting box. Preview seemed ok, so posted it here.
Found one discrepancy, of course. :P
Thank You. Makes it easier to look for my name. (just kidding...)
Very interesting ....thanks much
I will try that on 1/4 of the blob
Is there such thing as a source in Word documents?
Like there is HTML source for simple web pages
No, you can “reveal codes” in Word, but you can’t really save as a marked up file or view the source. More’s the pity. I read a fix one time for corruption in Word documents, and the article said to save as a Web page and the open the web page for editing to eliminate the section breaks, because that is often where corruption occurs. Nice, huh?
I use FrameMaker professionally, and you can save an fm document as a mif file and read the source code there.
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