Madoff Case Study
ISSUES IN ACCOUNTING EDUCATION American Accounting Association Vol. 29, No. 1 DOI: 10.2308/iace-50597 2014 pp. 271–285
The Madoff Debacle: What are the Lessons?
Srinivasan C. Ragothaman
ABSTRACT: This paper describes the implementation of a ‘‘Ponzi scheme case study’’ in auditing classes at the undergraduate and the Master’s level. This instructional case is
based on the much-publicized Madoff Ponzi scheme. The case exposes students to
several auditing-related concepts, including: (1) fraud auditing; (2) ethical reasoning and
utilitarian principles; (3) affinity fraud and Ponzi schemes; (4) internal control evaluation;
(5) governance issues; (6) the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
investigations; (7) investment strategies and terminologies; and (8) regulation. The
case provides students with an opportunity to assume the role of an external auditor and
participate in some active learning exercises. About 170 accounting majors participated
in this case project during a three-year period at a Midwestern university. Students who
worked in groups were genuinely engaged in the learning process, and they came up
with several red flags associated with the Madoff fraud and suggested many new internal
controls. This case provides a hands-on learning experience to students that could be
relevant for them in their future career in public accounting. Student opinion surveys
conducted about the learning outcomes of this project indicate strong student
engagement, active learning, and satisfaction.
Keywords: Ponzi scheme; fraud risk factors; affinity fraud; control environment; utilitarian ethics; professional skepticism.
CASE INTRODUCTION
T he Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) arrested Bernard L. Madoff (hereafter, Mr.
Madoff ) on a rainy morning in December 2008, based on tips from his two sons. They
confiscated dozens of checks, totaling $173 million, that were made out by him to his close
friends, key employees, and family members. Mr. Madoff was charged with multiple felonies,
including securities fraud, investment advisor fraud, mail fraud, and wire fraud. The U.S. District
Court Judge in New York City released him on a $10 million bond, gave orders to put electronic
bracelets on him, and confined him to his Manhattan apartment. It was a disappointment for the
prosecutors, who wanted him jailed. However, the prosecutors got their wishes when the judge also
ordered Mr. Madoff and his immediate family members to not sell or transfer any personal assets.
Srinivasan C. Ragothaman is a Professor at The University of South Dakota.
Comments received at the Effective Learning Strategies Forum of the American Accounting Association Annual Meeting held in Denver in August 2011 and from Angeline Lavin, Nolan Goetzinger, Pearl Nielsen, the editor, and an associate editor are appreciated. This manuscript has benefitted from substantial comments offered by two anonymous reviewers. The usual disclaimer applies.
Editor’s note: Accepted by William R. Pasewark
Published Online: August 2013
271
The FBI confiscated the passports of Mr. Madoff and his wife, Ruth. A federal judge froze the
assets of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC (BMIS) and a receiver was appointed to
handle the case (Henriques 2011).
Overview of Bernard Madoff Investment Securities LLC
After his high school graduation in 1956, Mr. Madoff attended The University of Alabama for
a year, where he was a member of a Jewish fraternity. He transferred to Hofstra University in 1957
and graduated with a degree in political science from Hofstra in 1960. Mr. Madoff and his wife held
several small jobs in the early years, including installing sprinklers, babysitting, and performing
lifeguard duties in Manhattan (Henriques 2011). He started his investment business in 1968 with a
capital of $5,000, which he and his wife had saved during the previous six years.
Mr. Madoff’s business grew slowly in the initial years. When he got a chance to become a
market maker on the National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations (NASDAQ)
in 1984, he grabbed the opportunity. His eldest son, Mark, had just finished his M.B.A. at Columbia
University and was eager to enter the family business. While Mr. Madoff looked after his
investment management and advisory business, he put Mark in charge of the market maker end of
the business. BMIS directly executed orders from retail brokers. About the same time, Mr. Madoff
invested in computer equipment and software to automate the order system (Henriques 2011). Peter
Madoff, his brother, spearheaded the computerization project and successfully developed a fast,
automated system to handle customer orders. This automated trading system pioneered by BMIS
brought fame to the investment firm and added to the mystique of the name: Bernard L. Madoff. By
2008, BMIS was the sixth largest market maker on the NASDAQ.
BMIS paid a small commission to retail brokers for order flow. Mr. Madoff compared this to
stocking manufacturers paying for the racks that display their products in supermarkets. Some
academics have argued that this practice of paying for order flow is not ethical, as it causes the
broker to violate his or her fiduciary responsibility to obtain the best execution price for the
customer. The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) did not like this Madoff business practice and
dubbed these payments ‘‘bribes’’ or ‘‘kickbacks.’’ The NYSE argued with the regulators that paying
for order flow is illegal and that the practice should be banned. However, the regulators eventually
sided with Mr. Madoff and the practice was declared legal (Henriques 2011).
BMIS was governed by a small, closely knit board of directors. Mr. Madoff was the founding
Chairman of BMIS and retained that position until his arrest in 2008. Brother Peter Madoff was the
Managing Director and the Chief Compliance Officer. Peter’s daughter, Shana Madoff, served as
the compliance attorney for the investment firm (Henriques 2011). In addition, Mr. Madoff’s two
sons (Mark and Andrew) served as the lead officers in the ‘‘market maker’’ division of the firm. The
chief financial officer, Frank DiPascali, was a long-term associate of Mr. Madoff. In short, the
management of BMIS was dominated by family members and friends.
Mr. Madoff was elected as the chair of the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) in
1990 and held that prominent post for three years. As chair of the NASD, Mr. Madoff vigorously
championed the cause of transparency. He was a founding member of the International Clearing
Corporation in London. He portrayed himself as a person of unimpeachable integrity. His (now
defunct) website used to say: ‘‘In an era of faceless organizations owned by other equally faceless
organizations, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC harks back to an earlier era in the
financial world: The owner’s name is on the door. Clients know that Bernie Madoff has a personal
interest in maintaining the unblemished record of value, fair-dealing, and high ethical standards that
has always been the firm’s hallmark.’’ His fame grew far and wide. By 1993, feeder funds had started
investing heavily with Madoff. They were impressed with his steady returns. Some feeder funds did
not tell their investors that they were investing with Mr. Madoff. The managers of some of these
272 Ragothaman
Issues in Accounting Education Volume 29, No. 1, 2014
feeder funds rationalized that they were investing only a small portion (10 to 15 percent) of their
portfolio with Madoff. Other feeder fund managers invested substantial portions of their portfolio
with Madoff. For example, Fairfield Greenwich Advisors invested $7.5 billion with BMIS, which was
53 percent of assets under its management. These feeder funds were paid a finder’s fee for bringing
investments to BMIS. Feeder funds also received substantial commissions from their investors. Mr.
Merkin, who managed three Madoff feeder funds, was alleged to have collected $470 million in fees
and commissions for bringing in $2.4 billion to BMIS (Chew 2009). Several hedge fund managers
also invested with BMIS. When it was all over, Mr. Madoff had cheated his investors to the tune of
approximately $20 billion through his Ponzi scheme (see: http://www.madofftrustee.com).
Mr. Madoff was on the Board of New York City Center, an innovative cultural institution
supported by the Madoff couple for decades (Henriques 2011). He served as the Chairman of the
Board of Directors of the Sy Syms School of Business at Yeshiva University and as the Treasurer of
its Board of Trustees. He moved in the upper echelons of society with aplomb and quickly
established himself as a prominent philanthropist. His family foundation handed out sizable
donations to various noble causes: cancer, theater, lymphoma research, education, hospitals, and
other non-profit institutions. It appears that charlatans are often schizophrenic.
Mr. Madoff owned opulent mansions in New York, Palm Beach, the French Riviera, and
London (Kravitz 2009). His massive Montauk, New York, beach house alone is valued at $8.75
million. His Palm Beach and London homes were in the name of his wife exclusively, and other
mansions were co-owned by the couple. He and his wife also co-owned an $8 million dollar luxury
apartment in Manhattan (Kravitz 2009). Mr. Madoff owned a luxury boat nicknamed ‘‘Bull’’
stationed in Miami, as well as a yacht on the Mediterranean. He had acquired fancy cars, expensive
watches, exclusive country club memberships, Savile Row suits, and other luxury items. He owned
a Brazilian-built Embraer Regional Jet with a price tag of $29 million (Kravitz 2009). Mr. Madoff
had a lavish lifestyle befitting a king. While under house arrest, he tried to mail jewelry and watches
worth a million dollars to his family before he was stopped by the authorities.
Madoff Clientele
Mr. Madoff initially targeted rich people in his own community. People were kept waiting if
they wanted to invest with Madoff. Not everyone was allowed to invest. It was an honor and a
privilege to invest with BMIS. Mr. Madoff was an insider and a pillar of the community and, hence,
people trusted him too quickly. He soon started promising a steady return of 10 to 12 percent each
year for his clients. These returns were guaranteed both in up and down markets. Mr. Madoff
promised positive and steady returns—always. A 10 percent return appeared modest when house
prices were going up 20 percent or more every year. The Internet and real estate bubbles made a 10
to 12 percent return look reasonable and feasible. Mr. Madoff advertised that he was using a so
called ‘‘fool-proof’’ investment strategy—the split-strike conversion scheme or collar trade
(Henriques 2011). Under this scheme, Mr. Madoff claimed he purchased 35 to 50 Standard &
Poor’s (S&P) 100 stocks, sold a call option (upside exposure) on the S&P 100 index, and bought a
put option (downside protection) on the S&P 100 index (Henriques 2011). Several analysts who
tried to replicate this strategy came to the conclusion that it would not generate steady returns of 10
to 12 percent over several years. It did not pass the ‘‘sniff’’ test. To secure a net return of 12 percent,
Madoff had to earn at least 16 percent so that he could pay a 4 percent fee to feeder fund managers
who brought in the investors (Markopolos 2005). Smart investors should have been skeptical about
these high levels of promised returns; perhaps their trust in Madoff blinded them.
Mr. Madoff’s clientele spread far and wide over the years. Many of his clients shared Madoff’s
religious affiliation—they were Jewish. His client list included prominent people in the
entertainment, business, and cable news industry. Celebrity Madoff investors included Steven
The Madoff Debacle: What are the Lessons? 273
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Spielberg, Kevin Bacon, Kyra Sedgwick, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Mort Zuckerman, Larry King, Elie
Wiesel, and others (Henriques 2011). Several other investors were well-to-do retirees who were
living in Florida, Arizona, Nevada, and Southern California. Many of them, unfortunately, did not
appear to properly diversify their investment. They trusted Madoff with their retirement funds. The
eight largest investors with Madoff had invested a whopping $21.42 billion. Exhibit 1 provides the
details.
Desiring steady returns, several charitable foundations also invested their funds with Mr. Madoff,
the famed New York philanthropist. Many Jewish charitable organizations were severely burnt by
their trust in Madoff (Szep 2008). A few of them invested 100 percent of their corpus with BMIS. For
example, the Chais Family Foundation invested all of its money with Madoff. Its annual distribution
to various causes was approximately $12.5 million. This foundation had to fire all of its employees
and shut down. The Robert I. Lappin Foundation invested all $8 million of its corpus with Madoff,
and it was also forced to close down. The Carl and Ruth Shapiro Family Foundation, a Boston-based
organization, estimated its loss exposure at $145 million, which represents between 40 percent and 45
percent of its total assets (Szep 2008). Yeshiva University invested $110 million in Madoff
investments, which was roughly 10 percent of its entire endowment. Mort Zuckerman, who owns the
New York Daily News, reported that his charitable trust could lose $30 million, its entire endowment, due to Madoff shenanigans. The Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity and the Wunderkinder
Foundation run by Stephen Spielberg both had substantial amounts of their corpus invested with
BMIS. New Jersey Senator Frank Lautenberg entrusted a substantial portion of his family’s charitable
funds to Madoff and was exposed to heavy losses. Charities typically distribute 5 percent of their
investment annually to various recipients. Clients came from affinity groups and, hence, it was easier
for them to trust Mr. Madoff. Charities are typically satisfied with an annual income of 5 percent and
seldom seek the refund of their corpus. Thus, Mr. Madoff could pay them 5 percent per year even if he
made no real investments and could perpetuate the Ponzi scheme for 20 long years!
Shenanigans at Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities
Professionals who sold Madoff investments included lawyers, accountants, bankers, brokers,
and even doctors. Many of these veterans thought Madoff had a system to make money.
Salespeople for Madoff investments in Europe were well trained and spoke multiple European
languages. They were wealthy and well connected. A large proportion of Madoff’s business came
from well-to-do European investors. Mr. Madoff only had two dozen people working for him in the
U.S. hedge fund business and another 28 working for him in his London office (Henriques 2011). A
key employee in accounting assisted Mr. Madoff by creating an elaborate phony paper trail and by
mailing falsified account statements to customers on a regular basis. His employees, including the
sales professionals, were well compensated. They were paid much above the industry norms. Key
employees were paid substantial bonuses, as well. Perhaps such exceedingly generous payments
should have raised some eyebrows.
Peter Madoff served as the Chief Compliance Officer and Senior Managing Director at BMIS
from 1969 to 2008. Peter was in charge of developing compliance policies and procedures and
overseeing their implementation. He created a comprehensive compliance manual and annual
compliance reports overseen by competent investment professionals. However, it was all an illusion
created with the fake filings and fictitious documentation. In June 2012, the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) filed a criminal complaint against Peter Madoff in the U.S. District
Court for the Southern District of New York alleging:
that in addition to creating false compliance materials, Peter Madoff created false broker-
dealer and investment advisor registration applications filed by BMIS. He also failed to
implement and review required policies and procedures, and falsified the firm’s books and
274 Ragothaman
Issues in Accounting Education Volume 29, No. 1, 2014
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The Madoff Debacle: What are the Lessons? 275
Issues in Accounting Education Volume 29, No. 1, 2014
records. Peter Madoff was richly rewarded for his misconduct, pocketing tens of millions
of dollars through salary and bonuses, fake trades, sham loans, and direct, undocumented
transfers of investor funds to himself from the bank account that BMIS used to perpetrate
the Ponzi scheme. (SEC 2012)
Peter Madoff was sentenced to ten years in jail for his role in the Madoff fraud in December 2012.
The chief financial officer, Frank DiPascali, was in charge of maintaining the accounting
records and financial management at BMIS. A 33-year veteran at BMIS, Frank was the chief
lieutenant of Mr. Madoff. Frank was also the ‘‘director of options trading’’ at the firm. Every three months, BMIS would mail quarterly statements to the firm’s investors. Many of these statements
showed investments in blue chip companies. These statements always showed a positive return of 3
to 4 percent every quarter. In earlier years, if investors requested a liquidation of their investments, a
check for the balance was promptly mailed to them. Since most of the investors were individually
very wealthy, the refund requests were sporadic. In addition, some investors were charitable
organizations and were not seeking the return of their original investment. Mr. Madoff, his brother,
and Frank DiPascali formed a tight-knit group that engineered this massive fraud and kept it secret
for a long time, to the detriment of thousands of gullible investors.
BMIS claimed to be a private fund and did not register with the SEC. Hence, it was not filing
financial information with the SEC on a regular basis for many years. BMIS, however, was audited
by Friehling & Horowitz, a small CPA firm in New York City. This accounting firm operated out of
a 13 feet by 18 feet office in uptown New York (Abkowitz 2008). The CPA firm consisted of three
people, including a secretary. Jerome Horowitz, the senior accountant at the firm, retired in 1991
and moved to Florida. The only active accountant at the firm, David G. Friehling, was a past
president of the Rockland County chapter of the New York State Society of Certified Public
Accountants and sat on the chapter’s executive board. David Friehling, a 49-year-old accountant,
apparently worked sporadically, according to a nearby worker in the office building (Abkowitz
2008). He was often seen driving a luxury Lexus. Mr. Friehling essentially attested for 17 years that
BMIS had a clean audit record. He collected a $250,000 audit fee for just signing the audit report,
and performed no audit procedures. Friehling & Horowitz did not submit itself for peer review
during the last 17 years (Abkowitz 2008). The firm had been consistently telling the New York
State CPA Society that they had not done any audits during those 17 years and, therefore, were not
subjected to any peer review. Mr. Friehling was also not registered with the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB). The Madoff Trustee, Irving Picard, sued JPMorgan Chase
in December 2010. Picard alleged that the Madoff banker had known that Friehling had neither
registered with the PCAOB nor subjected himself to the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (AICPA) peer review as early as 2006. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
(OCC) is also unhappy with JPMorgan Chase and is faulting the bank for not conducting due
diligence and for failing to report suspicious activity at BMIS.
Fairfield Greenwich Group invested a staggering $7.5 billion with BMIS (see Exhibit 1). In
2008, the Fairfield Fund announced on its website that it was managing $14 billion in assets. More
than 95 percent of this $14 billion came from Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. Hence, a little
more than 50 percent of the funds were invested with one individual (Mr. Madoff ) by Fairfield
managers. As a feeder fund, it was Fairfield’s fiduciary duty to do due diligence about BMIS before
investing. It appears that Fairfield failed to perform this duty and did not exhibit enough
professional skepticism. Of course, Fairfield was receiving substantial fees from its own clients and
from BMIS (Henriques 2011).
276 Ragothaman
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Red Flags
The SEC received multiple complaints against Mr. Madoff over the years (Scannell 2009).
Whenever the SEC made inquiries about the trading practices at BMIS, Mr. Madoff used his charm
and manipulative ways to explain away his dealings to the SEC inspection teams. While some of
these complaints were anonymous, several were credible and had professional names associated
with them. The earliest complaint was in 1992 and was directed at an associate of Mr. Madoff, Mr.
Avellino (Berenson 2009). Avellino and Bienes initially had set up an accounting firm in
Manhattan in 1977 and soon shifted their focus to raising funds for Mr. Madoff. By 1992, they had
raised $441 million from 3,200 clients and had entrusted these funds to Madoff (Berenson 2009).
What caught the attention of SEC investigators was the promise made by Avellino and Bienes that
they would pay 13.5 to 20 percent annual returns to their clients. This generous promise prompted
the SEC to wonder whether Avellino and Bienes were running a Ponzi scheme. When Avellino was
questioned by SEC investigators, he told them that the money has been entrusted to Mr. Madoff
(Berenson 2009). At that time, Madoff’s firm was an influential brokerage house on Wall Street.
Once Avellino assured the SEC investigators that he would return the money to investors and paid a
small fine to the SEC, the federal investigators concluded the investigation. Avellino and Madoff
had been connected for a long time; Mr. Avellino had worked for Mr. Madoff’s father-in-law since
1958 as an accountant. The SEC failed to ask the right question in 1992—Is Mr. Madoff (not
Avellino) running a Ponzi scheme?
Harry Markopolos filed complaints against Mr. Madoff multiple times and put his professional
name on the line. He complained to the Boston office of the SEC, suggesting that Madoff was either
front running or deceiving his investors by running a Ponzi scheme in 2000. As an example, front
running would occur if a stockbroker learns that a large retirement fund has a limit order in to
purchase a certain stock, and the broker uses this private information to buy the same stock just
before the retirement fund’s large order is executed. The SEC has banned front running. In an article
published in Barron’s, Arvedlund (2001) wondered how Madoff was getting such steady returns. She was also critical of the secrecy associated with the Madoff methods to generate the returns. A
long memo was sent by Markopolos in 2005 to the SEC detailing why he considered BMIS a fraud.
Markopolos (2005) listed 29 red flags in support of his allegation that Madoff had been committing a
serious fraud. A few of his red flags are discussed below. He pointed out that BMIS reported only
seven small monthly losses in 174 months (14.5 years). This defies logic. This is equivalent to a
major league baseball player hitting a 0.960. There were not enough index put option contracts in
total in the market to hedge the way Madoff said he was hedging. Several investors believed that Mr.
Madoff subsidized down months. Other investors believed that Mr. Madoff could time the market
perfectly because of his insider status. This is incredulous. There was a lot of secrecy associated with
BMIS operations, and only family members knew the Madoff investment strategy. The feeder fund
(Fairfield Sentry) took extraordinary pains to hide the fact that the real money manager was Mr.
Madoff. Sometimes the best advice financial advisors can offer their clients is to be conservative and
diversify their investments. Many of the financial advisors failed to offer this advice.
The Aftermath
Within a few weeks of his house arrest, Mr. Madoff’s customers had confessed that their loss
exposure totaled several billion dollars. A CNN (2008) business story reported that several
prominent Madoff investors, including Royal Bank of Scotland, BNP Paribas, Banco Santander,
HSBC, and others, announced billions in expected losses. A few weeks later, the court-appointed
receiver reported that he had recovered a sum of $1.1 billion from several Madoff bank accounts
(see: http://www.madofftrustee.com). Some of the big accounting firms were staring at potential
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lawsuits. Even though they were not the auditors of BMIS, the big accounting firms were the target
for the trial lawyers because of their role in auditing the feeder funds (Dugan and Crawford 2009).
Mr. Madoff pled guilty to 11 felony charges (securities fraud, investment advisor fraud, mail
fraud, wire fraud, money laundering, false statements, and others) in March 2009. He was awarded
the maximum possible jail sentence of 150 years in July 2009 and was asked to pay a restitution of
$170 billion (Henriques 2011). Mark Madoff (Mr. Madoff’s eldest son) committed suicide in
December 2010. Frank DiPascali pled guilty to ten felony charges and is awaiting sentencing. He is
cooperating with the government in the investigation. David Friehling pled guilty to felony charges
against him and lost his CPA license in July 2010. His sentence has been postponed multiple times,
as he is also cooperating with the government. The auditor’s son, Jeremy Friehling, committed
suicide in November 2012. The SEC punished nine employees in November 2011 for their
negligent roles in multiple Madoff investigations without firing any of them. These sanctions
included pay reductions, suspensions, and counseling memos. In November 2012, Irwin Lipkin,
former controller at BMIS, pled guilty to falsifying books and records. The Madoff Recovery
Initiative (see: http://www.madofftrustee.com) reports that as of April 2013, ‘‘the SIPA Trustee has recovered or entered into agreements to recover more than $9.32 billion.’’
Based upon the reading of this case and other materials suggested by the instructor, answer the
following questions.
Case Questions
(1) What are the red flags (fraud risk factors) that are present in this case? Red flags should be
grouped under three categories: pressures/incentives, opportunities, and (ethical)
attitudes/rationalizations. Please refer to AU-C Section 240 (AICPA 2012).
(2) There are multiple approaches available to make ethical decisions. Describe Utilitarian
Theory, Rights Theory, and Justice Theory. Who are all individuals and groups affected
by the Madoff Ponzi scheme, and how are they affected?
(3)a What were the weaknesses in the ‘‘control environment’’ of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC?
(3)b What organizational controls, including internal controls, should be put in place to
prevent another Madoff fraud from occurring again? Suggest some regulatory controls
that can deter another Madoff fraud.
(4) Investors, the auditor, feeder funds, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc.
(FINRA), SEC inspectors—all should have exhibited professional skepticism. What do
you understand by the phrase ‘‘professional skepticism’’? Describe it in detail. (5) Why did the SEC miss the fraud, even after receiving several complaints?
(6 ) Go to the SEC website or Google it to find and read the Markopolos complaint dated
November 7, 2005 (‘‘The World’s Largest Hedge Fund is a Fraud’’—19 pages long), against Bernie Madoff. Please summarize the key points in the complaint in one or two
pages of your own writing.
Possible Discussion Questions
(7) Why did no one blow the whistle from inside the Madoff investment firm for more than
20 years?
(8) Why did the Madoff Ponzi scheme continue for so long? Why was it not discovered
earlier?
(9) Is ‘‘paying for order flow’’ ethical? What is ‘‘front running’’? Is it ethical? (10) The concept of materiality requires professional judgment. Define the concept of
‘‘material misstatement’’ and the concept of ‘‘material investment.’’ Are the investments
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made ( percentages reported in parentheses) by the following people/groups with Madoff
material from their individual perspectives? Steven Spielberg (2 percent of his wealth); Chais Family Charitable Foundation (100 percent of its corpus); Fairfield Greenwich
Advisors (53 percent of assets under its management); René-Thierry Magon De La
Villehuchet (90 percent of his wealth); and Yeshiva University (10 percent of its total
endowment). Give your reasons.
REFERENCES
Abkowitz, A. 2008. Madoff’s auditor . . . doesn’t audit? CNNMoney. Available at: http://money.cnn.com/ 2008/12/17/news/companies/madoff.auditor.fortune/index.htm
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). 2012. Consideration of Fraud in a Financial Statement Audit. AU-C Section 240. New York, NY: AICPA.
Arvedlund, E. 2001. Don’t ask, don’t tell. Barron’s (May 7). Arvedlund, E. 2009. Too Good to Be True: The Rise and Fall of Bernie Madoff. New York, NY: Portfolio
Hardcover.
Berenson, A. 2009. 1992 Ponzi case missed signals about Madoff. The New York Times (January 17). Chew, R. 2009. Madoff feeder Merkin charged by Cuomo. Time (April 6). CNN. 2008. Banks face huge losses from $50B ‘‘scam.’’ Available at: http://www.cnn.com/2008/
BUSINESS/12/15/madoff.arrest.exposure/index.html
Dugan, I. J., and D. Crawford. 2009. Accounting firms that missed fraud at Madoff may be liable. The Wall Street Journal (February 18).
Henriques, D. 2011. Wizard of Lies: Bernie Madoff and the Death of Trust. New York, NY: Times Books, Henry Holt and Company.
Kravitz, D. 2009. How much does Madoff still have? Washington Post. Available at: http://voices. washingtonpost.com/washingtonpostinvestigations/2009/01/madoffs_money.html?hpid¼topnews
Markopolos, H. 2005. The world’s largest hedge fund is a fraud. Scribd. (November). Available at: http:// www.scribd.com/doc/9189285/Markopolos-Madoff-Complaint
Scannell, K. 2009. Madoff charges dug for years to no avail. Wall Street Journal (January 5). Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). 2012. SEC vs. Peter Madoff, Complaint in the U.S. District
Court for the Southern District of New York (June). Available at: http://www.justice.gov/usao/nys/
madoff/20120629infopetermadofffinal%20%28Signed%29%20.pdf
Szep, J. 2008. Charities hit hard as Madoff losses mount. Available at: http://www.reuters.com/article/2008/
12/15/us-madoff-charities-sb-idUSTRE4BE6TP20081215
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