Eideard

Sith gun robh so…

Incompetent SEC examiners kept scheme alive – says Madoff

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Daylife/Reuters Pictures used by permission

Nobody was more surprised that the Securities and Exchange Commission did not discover Bernard L. Madoff’s enormous Ponzi scheme years ago than Mr. Madoff himself.

After all, it would have been pretty simple, he said in a transcript of a jailhouse interview that is part of a trove of official exhibits released on Friday by the S.E.C.’s inspector general, H. David Kotz.

In the interview, Mr. Madoff said that the young investigators who pestered him over incidentals like e-mail messages should have just checked basics like his account with Wall Street’s central clearinghouse and his dealings with the firms that were supposedly handling his trades.

If you’re looking at a Ponzi scheme, it’s the first thing you do,” he said.

Those simple steps, he added, could have revealed years earlier that he was running the largest Ponzi scheme ever, a crime that has now dragged the S.E.C. into the worst scandal in its 75-year history. “It would have been easy for them to see,” he added.

The new exhibits consist of 6,157 pages of interviews, letters, e-mail messages, telephone records and other background material gathered during Mr. Kotz’s 10-month investigation of how the commission handled, and mishandled, numerous tips and warnings it received about Mr. Madoff over the years. His full report, released last month, found the agency had received six substantive complaints since 1992 — and botched the investigation of every one of them. He found no evidence of any bribery, collusion or deliberate sabotage of those investigations.

You needn’t worry much about investigators when you know the highest agency of the electorate – the United States Congress – has abdicated any responsibility for oversight. It started in 1994 with Newt’s Contract on America – accelerated and grew through K Street and C street – culminating in the Halliburton Years with Dickie and George W..

Written by eideard

October 31, 2009 at 6:00 pm

4 Responses

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  1. “… the Securities and Exchange Commission did not discover Bernard L. Madoff’s enormous Ponzi scheme …”

    The unfortunate fact is that 4/5 of government employees aren’t up to par. The problem lays with management… incompetent managers, hire incompetent employees.

    Jägermeister

    October 31, 2009 at 6:30 pm

  2. The board governing the SEC through all of this cupidity has been kicked out the door by Obama for their lack of oversight and disregard for the responsibility they owed investors.

    AFAIK, with one exception, each has been given a comparable position with Wall Street firms, comparable pay and clout. The exception retired.

    You can see how much importance the Market places on accomplishment and standards.

    moss

    November 1, 2009 at 6:12 am

  3. The role of the financial media should not be forgotten.
    They provided the ideal environment for things like
    that. A look back at what the majority of financial
    pundits said at the height of boom, when they hyped
    it all up and ridiculed every warning, criticism, etc.,
    speaks for itself, like that flashback video with a
    number of the worst financial pundits of the recent
    past:

    Joe

    November 1, 2009 at 6:08 am

    • It’s simple… People don’t like to hear bad news. That’s why you got these no good talking heads at Fox News yapping against what Peter Schiff had to say back then.

      Jägermeister

      November 1, 2009 at 7:23 am


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