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.
Skylar,
I think the important think to remember, is that you ARE ALIVE! For whatever reason, you have escaped death and that can only mean God has a special PURPOSE for you! You may not even see it directly but your life either has, is, or will affect someone else in a positive way that they wouldn’t have been affected had you not been here.
I know you affect mine in a good way…and I thank-you for that
thanks, hummingbird, for reminding me and for being so kind.
Skylar, your words struck me because ever since I heard of Garrido and Jacee. I have experienced the uncomfortable knot in the stomach similar to the one I felt throughout my whole “marriage,” for the first time since leaving over 7 years ago! I, too, feel like the lone survivor of a plane crash. My counselor said it is “survivor’s guilt” and I’m sure Jacee will experience it, too. We feel alone but we are not!
Hummingbird’s reminder that we are ALIVE and we did escape an untimely death was so timely for me. I hope it was for you, too.
It’s the unwelcome memories, isn’t it, that are getting to us? But, we are now SAFE and those memories were THEN, and this is NOW. (And the stomach knot is still there. Yuck!)
thanks NewLily,
Part of it too, is the cops are on his side and they still have not contacted me to explain why they are on his side.
Kind of like I was explaining to Mandy, that most of the drama in people’s lives is accompanied by scripts that we follow, it makes us feel better. Birth, Death, Marriage, Divorce, Traumatic accident, being raped, robbed or the victim of any crime at all.
There is an agency that handles things for you and people gather around you for support. There are hospitals, funeral homes, churches, lawyers, and of course the police and court systems. I have NONE OF THOSE. It’s like a nightmare. The cops are against me and the one lawyer I talked to said it sounded like my P was a spy! What a friken idiot. Of course he sounds like a spy, HE’S DELUSIONAL.
I feel like the only script I have is from a stephen king novel.
http://counsellingresource.com/ask-the-psychologist/2009/09/03/head-in-the-sand-disorder/
Morning Slimone, NL and Skylar, and everybody else. It’s absolutely normal to be angry: to feel like you’re waking up from the, “cult of nice.” It’s just knowing what to do with all that anger… Anger is a physical sensation as well, physical execise can help use up the adreniline, as well as release endorphines. Endorphines are the body’s natural pain reliever, and mood elavator. This might sound stooooopid, but I’ve taken up basking bread, using a sourdough starter. The process of kneading the bread, and the tactile sensation, as well as the patience required, all seems very therapeutic to me.
I’s funny how memories from the past can rear up out of nowhere, and really put us into a blue funk.
I’ve been finding myself thinking about my first marriage, that I left twenty years ago. I thought all those old issues were resolved, long ago. I don’t think my husband was a P, but had some N tendancys. At any rate, it was an unhappy marriage, and nearly broke my heart, and now, instead of thinking about ther most recent XP, I’m thinking about my XH, who might be an N. I guess its because I’ve ruminateed over the P for soooo long, and I know what He is…But I don’t think I’ve ever looked at the XH, in light of what we talk about here. Skylar and NL, I hope you both feel better today. Try baking bread. It’s so self-nurturing as well, so basic to life, and sooo good. God Bless.
Now I’m having thoughts of contacting him again. I dreamt of him again last night.
So, this morning, I read more about stockholm syndrome from:
http://counsellingresource.com/quizzes/stockholm/index.html
Thanks Easy, for posting a related link.
Missing him is stockholm syndrome and it helps a bit to read about it again, it explains my emotions but I keep thinking that maybe contacting him will lead to some way out of all these thoughts. Maybe get me some closure. Maybe connect me with feeling alive again – or being dead.
These are terrible feelings. Maybe I’m drinking too much coffee, maybe I need acupuncture.
Thank LF people. I’d be so much more lost if I didn’t at least get to open up to you guys.
skylar – there is no such thing a closure with a sociopath – contacting him will just prolong the agony..my opinion anyhow. If my sons every saw the evil one here again they would prolly have me committed, and I they should…I still think of him all the time but it is the lie’s he told that I miss – I wanted to believe – please dont contact him
yes, henry, I know, I need a life.
thanks for the words.
BTW, looks like they finally caught another sociopath. All the elements are here. This one even told people that he was a spy.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/6151258/Thanos-Papalexis-guilty-of-caretakers-murder-after-prostitute-testified-against-him.html
Skylar, Henry’s right, and you already no it. The only response is NO RESPONSE. It’s the only one they get! Any contact with them is walking into the FOG. Just keeping the confusion going. We have to accept that the only closure, is no closure. After a while, that in itself becomes enough. I’m sorry you are feeling awful. As hard as it might be try to make a gratitude list. Like:
!. I”m grateful to be alive.
2. I’m grateful I didn’t kill him and end up in prison for the rest of my life.
3. I’m grateful I have the ability to heal, and can love again. He can’t.
Anyway you get the picture. As Oxy would say, ((((Hugs))))