I
recently received a communication from a sophisticated, savvy individual
who has much experience with how the world works. This person seems
to be of the view that the Madoff scam may have been an organized
crime operation, with Mafia corruption in Madoff and the SEC. This
possibility of organized crime being involved has occurred to me
also, and has been alluded to here on a couple of occasions. (Interestingly,
Harry Markopolos feared for his life, thinking Bernie would have
a hit put on him if his efforts during the 2000s were uncovered.
This very fear seems to smack of an organized crime connection,
of an unarticulated fear of some type of Mafia connection somewhere
in the deal.)
Unless
and until the government uncovers and discloses that there was a
tie to organized crime, the idea that the Italian, Jewish, Irish,
or, more lately, Russian Mafia were involved must remain mere speculation,
speculation that might be right or might be wrong. But here are
some of the facts and ideas fueling the speculation:
Right
now an awful lot of billions of dollars seem to have disappeared
into thin air. Did all of this huge sum - apparently nearly $200
billion over the years - disappear because of redemptions and Bernie’s
personal siphoning off of what - a few billion perhaps? Could all
of it have disappeared because of redemptions when you figure that
so many of Bernie’s investors were in Madoff for the duration, that
instead of withdrawing their principal, they let it ride, and many
of them let the income ride, for literally decades? Madoff was a
long term, not a short term, investment for thousands of
people, for feeder funds, and for charities. Indeed, there are those
who believe the reason he cultivated charities is that they generally
withdraw only five or six percent a year, so that he could be sure
that, at least in the case of charities, there would be no “run
on the bank.” I suppose the same calculation is one reason (along
with a desire to attract money in the first place) that lay behind
his paying feeder fund managers so much money - a four percent commission,
while they were also charging their investors a one percent commission
plus 20 percent of profits. This would ensure there was no possibility
that they would withdraw money. (Nobody foresaw the kind
of financial meltdown that in 2008 caused feeder funds to need to
redeem because their desperate investors were conducting
a “bank run” on them.)
So,
if one figures that so many investors were in Madoff for the duration
- I would personally bet 90 percent or more, but the Trustee has
the ability to know for certain yet has not said - where did the
money go? To me, a very logical possibility is that at least
scores of billions, if not as much as $150 billion or more,
were siphoned off by the Mafia.
Further
fueling the speculation is the fact that, at least as of now, the
billions taken in by Madoff appear so difficult to trace. Difficulty
of tracing would seem to be a hallmark of organized crime, wouldn’t
it?
Then
too there was, if I remember correctly, a period when there was
great concern that organized crime was attempting to and had to
some extent succeeded in penetrating Wall Street. Couldn’t Madoff
have been a part of that effort?
There
is also the question of Madoff’s employees on the infamous 17th
floor. According to the very little that has appeared in the media
about them so far, they appear to generally or exclusively have
been uneducated persons without training or experience in finance.
Nor did any of them ever talk despite what to many of us seems the
impossibility, given the tasks they apparently were performing,
of never knowing and never even suspecting that something might
be wrong. Where did Uncle Bernie get these people? They couldn’t
have been recommended to him, even possibly recruited for him, by
the Mafia, could they? It’s not possible - is it? - that they knew,
because of who recruited them, that he or she who talks ends up
in the river? Plus, weren’t they paid much better than their lack
of education might ordinarily have warranted?
Has
the government looked into the 17th floor employees’ backgrounds
and connections, into how they came to be hired by dear old avuncular
Uncle Bernie?
Nor
did anybody in Bernie’s family ever talk though, for reasons often
canvassed here and elsewhere, they could not help knowing that something
was amiss. Were they aware that to talk is to end up in the
river?
Indeed,
doesn’t Bernie’s apparent silence and uncooperativeness since being
arrested smack of the same thing - of knowledge that to talk would
be a death sentence regardless of what prison he is put into? One
might ordinarily think that Bernie might cooperate in tracing the
money if, in return, his time in the slammer would be knocked down
to, say, five or six years in return for leading the Feds to recovery
of monies that might make victims whole or close to it. After all,
in five or six years he will be only 75 or 76 and, these days, might
be able to look forward to another ten or fifteen years on the outside.
Yet he won’t talk, the publicly accepted explanation/speculation
being that he is trying to protect his family and its secreted money.
But is this explanation right? Is it right even though he and his
family must know by now that the family and its money will be closely
watched, will be tracked, for decades (just like O.J. Simpson)?
Might
the explanation therefore be something else entirely - might it
be that he knows that, if he talks, he’ll never live to get out
of the slammer in five or six years and, were he somehow to get
out of the slammer alive - which would be unlikely to impossible
- his life wouldn’t be worth a plugged nickel after that because
he will soon end up in the river?
Then
too, one wonders whether Madoff, in his allocution before the judge
may have deliberately given a (perhaps subtle) hint for whatever
reasons may have motivated him (perhaps a clever desire to lead
the government to try and to succeed in uncovering a mob connection
entirely on its own, so that he could get out from under a death
sentence). Madoff said in his allocution that he turned to fraud
because:
I
had received investment commitments from certain institutional
clients and understood that those clients, like all professional
investors, expected to see their investments out-perform the market.
While I never promised a specific rate of return to any client,
I felt compelled to satisfy my clients’ expectations, at any cost.
In
papers it filed with Judge Chin just before the hearing on Madoff’s
guilty plea and on bail, the government said that Madoff had promised
some people returns as high as 46 percent. Dig that - 46 percent.
Now who the hell would you promise 46 percent to except gangsters?
That kind of earnings rate just isn’t promised to people unless
something is very wrong - as when organized crime might be financing
you at usurious exorbitant rates. And why else, except to keep organized
crime satisfied lest his legs be broken at best or, worse, he be
found in a concrete barrel at the bottom of the East River, would
Madoff, if he was telling the truth about this in his allocution,
have “felt compelled to satisfy my clients’ expectations,
at any cost”? (Emphasis added.) Compelled to satisfy
their expectations - at any cost? It sounds like a Mafia
deal to me.
As
well, consider this. When the SEC undertook to investigate Bienes
and Avellino in 1992, it
feared, as it said, a giant Ponzi scheme. But its fear of a Ponzi
scheme was allayed, and it publicly said there was no fraud (a kind
of statement it never makes, securities experts say), because
Madoff came up with about $450 million to return to investors -
if he did come up with it instead of just saying he
had it in order to entice investors to leave their money with him
in direct investments instead of using indirect investments
through Bienes and Avellino (whom the SEC kicked out of the business
- although the word on the street, everywhere, is that they did
not really leave the business but just operated underground).
If Madoff really came with $450 million - did the
SEC check the truth of that? - where did he manage to
get such a huge sum so quickly to ward off an SEC finding of a Ponzi
scheme? Organized crime would be a logical possibility, would it
not? How else could he suddenly come up with $450 million?
That
organized crime may have been involved in the Madoff deal is, at
present, only a speculation. But the more one considers the already
known evidence and the facts that lead to this speculation, the
more likely it appears that the speculation could in fact be the
truth. One wonders: are the FBI and the U.S. Attorney considering
and investigating the possibility that Madoff was an organized crime
deal? If they are not, why not? If they are, what are they finding
and what and when will Madoff’s victims and the public be told?
In ways that one can only begin to guess at now, the answers to
these questions will bear on a host of crucial matters, ranging
from various forms of possible restitution to victims to the standing
of American markets in the world.
There
are people who are in touch with relevant governmental actors. They,
and the rest of us among victims, in the public, in the media, and
in Congress, should begin to continuously demand to know the answer
to the question of whether Madoff was or was not tied in with the
Mafia. There seems to have been an awful lot of smoke here. Was
there also a fire?
I
cannot resist closing with the following: When I was a kid around
1952, 1953, 1954, there were some books that came out about gangs
and such and that were popular with and read by youngsters. One
was The Amboy Dukes, another was The Hoods, and I
think A Stone For Danny Fisher may have involved similar
things. (None of these books are to be confused with Meyer Levin’s
The Old Bunch.) An episode in The Hoods was very funny,
at least to a twelve or thirteen year old or a fourteen year old.
A group of gangsters had invented a magical machine. You put toilet
paper in one end, turned a crank, and money came out the other end.
The machine was called the “crap paper machine.” It turned toilet
paper into money. It was, of course, a fraud.
The
gangsters wanted to sell the machine for lots of money, so they
persuaded a businessman to watch a demonstration of it. They put
crap paper in one end, turned the crank, and out came money on the
other end. The
businessman bought it for a fortune (either never thinking to ask
why the hoods would sell a machine that printed money instead
of just using it to print money, or being satisfied with
whatever explanation the hoods gave).
Anyway,
the episode was very funny to a kid. Imagine, a bunch of hoods had
sold a machine that ostensibly took crap paper and turned it into
money. Ho, ho, ho. But hasn’t Madoff created a reverse crap paper
machine? Instead of taking in crap paper and turning it into money,
his machine took in money and turned it into crap paper. Enough
crap paper to service all of New
York State for a couple of years maybe.
The
question here in regard to Madoff’s reverse crap paper machine
is whether, as in The Hoods, the hoods were involved in Madoff’s
machine. Were the hoods floating Madoff’s reverse crap paper machine
here just as the hoods created the crap paper machine in The
Hoods? And is the government focusing on this possibility, which
looks like it could conceivably be all too real instead of just
speculation.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Lawrence R.
Velvel, JD, is the Dean of Massachusetts
School of Law. He is the author of
Blogs From the Liberal Standpoint: 2004-2005 (Doukathsan
Press, 2006). Click here
to contact Dean Velvel, or you may, post your comment on his website,
VelvelOnNationalAffairs.com. |