Can the Spiffy New SEC Catch Madoff’s Minions?

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Once known as Wall Street’s top cops fighting white collar crime, the Securities and Exchange Commission came under intense public scrutiny for failing to catch Bernard L. Madoff in the multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme to which he confessed more than a year ago. In hopes of regaining some of its star power (read: dignity) the SEC announced last week that it plans to reorganize its enforcement division into specialized, topical groups and implement a new initiative that would offer rewards to those who assist SEC investigations in a substantial way.

Madoff is already behind bars, but the SEC’s metamorphosis into a make-shift prosecutor’s office may help them nail some Madoff’s relatives, friends and business associates—the people who also made out with your millions but who have not yet seen the inside of a jail cell. Check out the current issue of Mother Jones for a rundown of which Madoff crony pulled $15 million from her Madoff LLC accounts just weeks before Bernie’s “confession,” which minion used his company card to invest in a hair blow-drying salon, and a whole host of other outrageous details that will reignite your passion to help the SEC put these people behind bars. 

Here’s an excerpt:

In a workplace where pricey suits were the norm, Bernie’s Marlboro-smoking right-hand man dressed in jeans and sneakers, but he was so gruff when investors called him with questions that many simply stopped calling. Frank DiPascali helped invent and perpetuate Madoff’s phony trading scheme; his take included a mansion in Bridgewater, New Jersey, a pair of Benzes in the driveway, and a monster fishing boat whose captain had his very own Madoff AmEx. The only true insider indicted as of press time—others included rubber-stamping accountant David Friehling and two IT guys charged with providing tech support for the scam—DiPascali faces up to 125 years upriver. Sentencing is set for May. In the meantime, from jail, he’s helping the FBI make sense of company records and build cases against as yet unnamed coconspirators.

Read the full piece for more on The Wife: Ruth Madoff, The Sons: Mark and Andrew Madoff, The Brother: Peter Madoff, The Niece: Shana Madoff, and more.

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Take the next step: Help us fight for the truth.

Investigative journalism, like the story you just read, takes time to do. Months of research. Weeks of writing, editing, and fact checking—and putting together the photography, art, video, and audio that tell the stories in a new way, illuminating new perspectives and voices

We can afford to take that time because we don’t report to an oligarch or corporation with a special agenda. We report to you, and for you. That’s why we unabashedly pursue the truth and relentlessly shine a light into the darkness.

In this month’s Summer Membership Drive, we’ve got to raise $200,000 to support more crucial investigations. This is a pivotal moment in our nation, with democracy on the line, and we can only do this work because readers like you step up. Every donation, of any amount, makes a difference here. We cannot do this work without you.

So, we’re asking: Will you support independent journalism that demands those in power answer for their actions?

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