Bernie Madoff swindled an estimated $50 billion from investors in his hedge fund, and in March 2009, pleaded guilty to securities fraud. He was sentenced to 150 years in jail. But if the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which is charged with regulating the securities business, had been doing its job, Madoff could have been stopped years earlier.
In a scathing report issued last week, the SEC’s inspector general, H. David Kotz, summarized six substantial complaints that the agency received about Madoff dating back as far as 1992. The SEC conducted two investigations and three examinations into the complaints, and never identified Madoff’s Ponzi scheme.
The good news is that Kotz found no evidence of blatant wrongdoing in the SEC—no one was paid off to whitewash the investigations. The bad news is that the inspector general found plenty of evidence of screw-ups.
Several different teams of examiners looked into the complaints, yet Madoff was able to dazzle, confuse and intimidate them so that they never found out what he was really doing. Then, after the examinations were closed, Madoff gave himself the SEC seal of approval. In his report, Kotz wrote:
Madoff proactively informed potential investors that the SEC had examined his operations. When potential investors expressed hesitation about investing with Madoff, he cited the prior SEC examinations to establish credibility and allay suspicions or investor doubts that may have arisen while due diligence was being conducted. Thus, the fact the SEC had conducted examinations and investigations and did not detect the fraud, lent credibility to Madoff’s operations and had the effect of encouraging additional individuals and entities to invest with him.
Bureaucratic ineptitude
So how did this happen? Essentially, Madoff used the inherent nature of governmental agencies to his advantage.
We probably all have stories of bureaucratic ineptitude. All organizations have issues with politics, turf wars, not-my-job, lack of direction, miscommunication, falling-through-the-cracks, brown nosing, not-pulling-your-weight, etc., etc. In my opinion and experience, these issues are worse in governmental organizations, where connections outrank skill and it’s impossible to get rid of underperformers.
Psychopaths exploit these conditions to the max. They are experts at using upheaval and confusion to their advantage. But in Bernie Madoff’s case, it seems that what he used the most was ignorance.
In his report, Kotz repeatedly says that the people assigned to investigate Madoff were “inexperienced.” How inexperienced were they?
2004 investigation
In an investigation initiated in 2004, touched off by the discovery of an e-mail that provided a step-by-step analysis of why Madoff must have been engaging in fraud, one of the junior examiners was five years out of college, and the SEC was his first job. Another examiner had worked on only four cases before being assigned to the Madoff case.
So it looks like the SEC sent a few 20-somethings to deal with Bernie Madoff. The psychopath distracted them with his stories of the securities business and intimidated them by dropping names of his high-up connections. When they actually persisted in asking for documents, Madoff became angry. “His veins were popping out of his neck,” one of the investigators said.
When the young examiners reported their difficulties to superiors, they got no support. In fact, the “were actively discouraged from forcing the issue,” Kotz wrote.
Why did they receive no backup? My guess is that higher-ranking bureaucrats at the SEC knew Bernie Madoff, either personally or by reputation, and did not want to go up against a man who was former chairman of the NASDAQ stock exchange and a legend in the securities business.
The investigators repeatedly caught Madoff in lies and inconsistencies. But instead of seeking independent verification, they accepted Madoff’s explanations as plausible.
2005 investigation
In 2005, a former investment manager turned whistleblower, Harry Markopolos, submitted his third complaint about Madoff to the SEC. The title: The world’s largest hedge fund is a fraud.
An SEC regional Enforcement department took the case. Here’s how the complaint was handled, according to Kotz:
It was assigned to a team with little to no experience conducting Ponzi scheme investigations. The majority of the investigatory work was conducted by a staff attorney who recently graduated from law school and only joined the SEC 19 months before she was given the Madoff investigation. She had never previously been the lead staff attorney on any investigation, and had been involved in very few investigations overall. The Madoff assignment was also her first real exposure to broker-dealer issues.
The Enforcement staff, which I assume means our young attorney, discounted the Markopolos report and questioned his motives. Furthermore, they (she) believed Madoff did not fit the “profile” of a Ponzi scheme operator because he was a reputable member of society.
The Enforcement staff did not understand options trading. They did not understand Madoff’s purported trading strategy. They were told that they were not sufficiently prepared to take Madoff’s testimony. They went forward with the scheduled testimony anyway.
Here’s a final note about the Enforcement staff investigation that Katz included in his report:
Shortly after the Madoff Enforcement investigation was effectively concluded, the staff attorney on the investigation received the highest performance rating available at the SEC, in part, for her “ability to understand and analyze the complex issues of the Madoff investigation.”
Systemic failures
The report of H. David Kotz, Investigation of failure of the SEC to uncover Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, is fairly readable, even for those of us who don’t understand the securities business. What was released last week was the 22-page executive summary. The full report, which will apparently come out soon, is over 400 pages.
The summary is an eye-opening look at the systemic failures of an important agency that was supposed protect the interests of American investors. It shows, in brutal detail, how many opportunities to bust Madoff were missed, and why. If you don’t want to read the 22 pages, an article in the New York Times, Report details how Madoff’s web ensnared SEC, provides a good summary.
Misconceptions
The issue of Madoff not fitting the profile goes, I believe, to the heart of the problem: People cannot conceive of the fact that evil can masquerade as reputable.
Of course, there was a time when many of us lived under the same misconceptions: The trappings of respectability reflect actual respectability. People in positions of responsibility play by the rules. There’s good inside everyone.
It’s only after our own run-ins with psychopaths that we’ve learned differently.
The bottom line is this: Society doesn’t understand that some people are evil, no matter how good they look. Many government agencies, along with other organizations, are structurally incapable of coping with covert evil. This creates an environment of confusion, inexperience and denial that enables psychopaths to flourish.
Everyone should read Glinda’s post about money vs. sex.
THE Pentagon of the usa swindeled 3 trillion $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
OOPS we can’t account for this $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ out of the mouth of the top swindler Donold Rumsfield! one day before 9-11 Hummmm?
that is over 8,000 $ per us citcen each Humm? no need to account for this $ we will just print more Hum????
A real wife
even though we can feel hatered toward this person for the evil he is! He is still a person, like you and me! to pass judgement is not our roll , to keep this person from ever harming another soul is our purpose.
I to would have him hog tied and presented for enjoyment of every prision inmate in the world to abuse!
but does it serve the greater good? no
tie him to the ground and let the fireants eat him alive!
This only serves a few fireants!
Put him in isolation for life and study every waking /sleeping momment of his life now until death!
but even this is torture!
A realwife,
I’m so glad that you are pursuing that double major. I would like to do a similar double, with psych and criminal profiling.
My major interest would be to profile people who want to be cops. In my experience they really have issues. My P knows this and that is his main source of supply for all of his evil plans. A cop should be a person who is above being conned, but instead many, like my BIL are the most evil sociopaths of all. Also, we should implement profiling of all current cops and kick out the ones that fall into the mid to high range of the P continuum.
As far as the Ridgeway, well he didn’t kill me because I didn’t take the money and his illusions of granduer included the delusion that he was “cleaning up the prostitute problem”.
My P just hates all women because he hates his mom so he would just like to kill us all.
Until society can see that there is no such thing as misogyny and there is no such thing as racism, there is only the psychopathology of hatred. Hating certain groups in order to have an excuse to hate someone is a sociopath’s way of spreading his hate. Without this group how could he convince himself and others of his delusional logic? “I only hate prostitutes” “Women are all ****!”
Now, with a scapegoat, the delusional P can avoid the truth, which is the fact that HE is not normal and his pathological envy is against the whole human race and God himself.
Of course a woman hater would not admit to wanting to kill all women, but instead approve of treating them like crap and calling them names. That is what my P did for the last few years. Before that, he professed a deep respect for woman and a hatred of the Taliban and other woman haters.
It makes me sad that I cannot take peoples’ word and believe that they are who and what they say they are anymore.
I just watched an interview by Meredith Viera with Rod Blagojevich this AM and watched a master narcissiopathic manipulator at work on a national morning news program. I bet he is so pleased with himself.
She asked him direct questions about people he claims supported his actions, Rahm Emmanuel, Obama and others and he redirected the subject away from answering that and onto his innocence – it was an amazing display and I wonder why she did not ask him to answer the question – Earlier she asked why in the taped conversations that have been released he appears to be trying to sell the Senate seat Obama was going to vacate and he did a Garrido and said – “when you hear the full tape in its context” blah blah blah –
I’ll bet in a few months when he is on trial the tapes will NOT exonerate him – but he has tried to leave that impression – just like the sicko Garrido with his twist on how the story Jaycee will tell will be uplifting and wonderful and… make me vomit.
Blago is as disgusting as Garrido just slicker and the book publisher ought to be deluged with mail for rewarding this scum with a mouthpiece and money. It is all just gross.
Okay – enough of a rant today – and it is only 9:45Am here…
Blago’s avoidance of the question is a classic ploy. Another classic that I’ll bet he uses is “the best defense is a good offense.” I expect to hear a lot from him about how everything was someone else’s fault and how all sorts of people did things that were worse than he did. As if that makes his crimes acceptable.
Skylar and All,
Sky-Boy-o! Your teenage escape story blew my hair back. I could put myself in your place (cause I was a misbehavin’ girl, too). GeezLoueez.
As for bein’ mad. Well, after two years NC, from one of many crapbags I have found myself vexed with, I am FINALLY starting to get really angry. I am not used to being angry so this is a weird place to be. And not expected. I just figured I musta skipped that phase of the loss process.
Waking up from the Cult of Nice, that’s what I am doing.
And I feel embarrassed for being mad at two years out. Can’t really say why NOW I am mad. Maybe it’s the full realization of what being alive is really about. Facing the truth, opening my eyes, and living from authenticity. But I am so so so pissed off. I think I liked my illusions, and what they allowed me to ignore. I feel like I am detoxing from the fantasies I have been gorging on, and fighting the process.
Part of me STILL does not want all of what each and every one of us knows to be true, to..be..true. I don’t yet know how to find my happiness in the real world as I find it so terrifying and unstable. THIS MAKES ME MAD!!!!!
I kinda feel like I am have an existential temper tantrum. I don’t much care for it, but I had better learn to do something with it, that is constructive.
I feel like a 50 foot woman, with PTSD! Whoa.
Glinda – Your comment above was a real gem… not only is the sentiment right on the money, but the way you stated really gave me pause for thought. My first thought was to post and call the attention of others to your insightful comment – obviously given the additional comments by others I was not alone in my appreciation of your thoughts. I always love how donna or one of the other blog posters calls our attention to something which then opens the way for other truths and enlightened statements to be brought forth!
Thanks for sharing!
Hecate’s Path
Glinda I agree with Hecate’s Path..I do cring when I read how some victims were conned out of huge amounts of money or someones life saving’s. That would add huge amounts of anger and pain, however everybodys heart breaks the same way when it come’s to being ‘conned’ into believing someone loved us.
Slimone,
Today has been a real downer for me. No particular reason, my friend even took me to lunch, I should be happy. But I have a bad feeling in the pit of my stomach again, just like I used to before I left the P.
I think that it may be connected to some thoughts about my P and the Green River murderer.
When I first realized that I had encountered such an evil predator and escaped, I didn’t know what to think. How does one feel about that? How? Grateful? yes, but also like being the lone survivor on an airplane crash. But my P was with me when I saw the news and I felt so safe by that time, it had happened so long before. It seemed like a distant kiss from God reminding me that He loved me and that I was now safe.
BUT I WASN’T. And it would take another 15 years to find out that I wasn’t and more than that, this encounter was long and drawn out, like the kidnapped girl’s experience. Not short-lived like the first time.
It just seems like – why the F**K does everyone want to KILL ME!? WHY was I chosen to be the fricken sacrificial lamb?
I feel really scared all the time, like I can’t trust my own judgement to keep me safe, not just from having my heart broken and my money taken but even for my life.
I mean what are the chances of getting away from the GR murderer and ending up with someone WORSE? Even the GR didn’t want to kill his own wife. My P wanted to torture and kill me. I’m really feeling the PTSD today. Can’t even think my way out of it…