More than 25,000 Madoff victims now
eligible for $4 billion fund
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[May 19, 2016]
By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The overseer of a $4
billion U.S. Department of Justice fund for victims of Bernard Madoff's
Ponzi scheme said he expected to recommend payouts for at least 25,280
claimants with nearly $4 billion in fraud losses.
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Bernard Madoff exits the Manhattan federal court house in New York in
this January 14, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/Files |
Richard Breeden, special master of the Madoff Victim Fund, said in
an update on his website this week that his office was
"substantially" finished with the initial claims review process,
having analyzed 63,580 claims covering $67.8 billion of alleged
losses.
While there is no timetable for payouts, the announcement suggests
that many Madoff victims may soon see the end of their 7-1/2-year
wait to recoup at least some losses.
Madoff's fraud was uncovered in December 2008. The swindler, now 78,
pleaded guilty three months later, and is serving a 150-year prison
term for running what federal prosecutors called a $64.8 billion
Ponzi scheme.
"It sounds like it is good news for claimants," said Daniel Krasner,
a partner at Wolf Haldenstein Adler Freeman & Herz in New York,
whose clients have submitted dozens of claims to Breeden. "They
could end up with a significant portion of their claims."
Payouts would be separate from those being made by Irving Picard, a
court-appointed trustee liquidating Bernard L. Madoff Investment
Securities LLC, to the swindler's former customers.
Breeden's fund also differs because he is allowing claims by
"indirect" investors who had accounts at "feeder funds," hedge
funds, banks and other entities that sent their money to Madoff.
In his update, Breeden said he expected to reject payouts on 7,540
claims covering $25.7 billion of alleged losses.
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Breeden has also told holders of 30,760 "incomplete" claims covering
$27 billion of alleged losses that they have until early July to fix
deficiencies. Another 1,000 claims, some of which involve swaps and
derivatives, have yet to be reviewed.
"Completing the initial review of claims is a major milestone in the
case, and it brings us a big step closer to the cash distributions
we all want to see," said Breeden, a former chairman of the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission.
Breeden said he planned to file formal payout recommendations with
the Justice Department by the end of August. He was not immediately
available on Wednesday for comment.
Picard has paid out roughly $8.6 billion of the $11.1 billion he has
recouped, according to his own website.
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