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NY trustee seeks nearly $20B in latest action

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[December 11, 2010]  NEW YORK (AP) -- The trustee seeking to recover money for investors who lost billions of dollars in jailed financier Bernard Madoff's fraud said Friday he has filed civil racketeering charges against an Austrian banker and 55 other defendants, demanding they give up nearly $20 billion as a penalty for their "criminal relationship" with Madoff.

InsuranceCourt-appointed trustee Irving Picard used tough language to portray a 23-year relationship between banker Sonja Kohn and Madoff, saying she and others engaged in money laundering, mail and wire fraud and financial institution fraud. He also accused her of accepting secret kickbacks from Madoff.

Picard also announced Friday that he reached settlements with a number of charities and nonprofit organizations to recover more than $80 million and resolve civil claims against charities that withdrew more money than they deposited in accounts with Madoff.

Picard filed a lawsuit in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan against members of what he labeled the "Medici Enterprise." He called Kohn the scheme's mastermind. A message for comment sent to a Kohn spokeswoman was not immediately returned.

"In Sonja Kohn, Madoff found a criminal soul mate, whose greed and dishonest inventiveness equaled his own," Picard said as he asked for $19.6 million in damages.

Timothy Pfeifer, Picard's court-appointed counsel, said Kohn used multiple names and guises in creating an "international network of spurious investment entities and masterminding an illegal scheme not only to support the Madoff fraud, but also to enrich herself, her family and the largest banks in Austria and Italy."

Charged in the complaint along with Kohn, the principal shareholder of Bank Medici, were six members of her family, along with various trusts and companies in New York, Austria, Italy, Gibraltar and elsewhere. Those companies included UniCredit and Bank Austria.

Picard alleged in the civil complaint that Kohn channeled more than $9 billion into Madoff's Ponzi scheme while she and her family siphoned at least $62 million from Madoff's accounts into their private accounts. He charges she used an elaborate network of sham entities in New York and elsewhere that existed solely to receive secret kickbacks from Madoff.

"The total amount lost in the Ponzi scheme is approximately $19.6 billion, making these actors arguably the single most critical building block -- the `sine qua non' -- of the Ponzi scheme," Pfeifer said.

Pfeifer said Kohn demonstrated her "intimate knowledge of Madoff's fraud" by acting suspiciously in the days and weeks before Madoff's December 2008 arrest.

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He said she and her family used a network of trusts and nominee companies to launder the stolen proceeds of her scheme and to conceal it.

Picard said Madoff kept records of the accounts for which he secretly paid Kohn and appears to have tried to destroy the records before he confessed the fraud to his sons hours before his arrest.

He said Kohn solicited at least 30 direct accounts for Madoff.

"To potential investors, Kohn held herself out as a close friend of Madoff and intimated that this relationship would yield special returns for investors she referred," said David J. Sheehan, one of Picard's lawyers.

Sheehan said Kohn began the scheme almost immediately after meeting Madoff in the mid-1980s. He said the scheme was a secret even within Madoff's private investment business. He added that Kohn took calculated measures to distance herself and her family from the fraud.

Regarding the settlement with charities, Picard said he is pleased that some nonprofit organizations came forward to negotiate.

"Through these settlements, these admirable groups can continue with their good works and social programs. By settling, these charities remove the uncertainty generated by either potential claims or litigation, and, importantly, their donors can continue to contribute with confidence to their favorite charities," he said.

[Associated Press; By LARRY NEUMEISTER]

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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