US judge orders Madoff assets secured for seizure

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A US judge blocked the transfer of the personal wealth of swindler Bernard Madoff and his wife because it could be subject to forfeiture as various parties compete to lock down the assets for distribution to defrauded investors.

The order yesterday by Judge Denny Chin, who oversees the criminal case against Madoff, came on the same day a bankruptcy court judge approved the appointment of an interim trustee to coordinate efforts to recover the former investment adviser’s property and money.

Madoff pleaded guilty in March to running the biggest investment fraud in Wall Street history.

US prosecutors said in court papers on Friday that Chin should restrain the Madoff assets so they are not part of any proceeding in bankruptcy court.

At a hearing in US Bankruptcy Court in New York yesterday, Judge Burton Lifland said that activities by various authorities to recover Madoff assets had been “disjointed and uncoordinated.”

US prosecutors, the US Securities and Exchange Commission, the court-appointed trustee liquidating Madoff’s brokerage firm and groups of investors are among those seeking to find and recover billions in assets, which include homes, boats, cars and business interests.

“Clearly there has to be a trustee in bankruptcy at least on an interim basis to sit at the table to try and coordinate all of the activities surrounding the Madoff interests,” Lifland said in bankruptcy court.

The case was brought by a group of investors who wanted to force Madoff into personal bankruptcy as a way of making sure all of the assets were accounted for.

Madoff, a former non-executive chairman of the Nasdaq stock market, pleaded guilty on March 12 to running a fraud involving as much as $65 billion over 20 years, drawing in thousands of investors all over the world. The 70-year-old is in jail until sentencing on June 16, when he could be sent to prison for the rest of his life.

Madoff’s lawyer Ira Lee Sorkin, in a letter to the three judges overseeing the criminal, civil and bankruptcy court cases, said he opposed the appointment of an interim trustee.

“Separately, we respectfully request a joint conference with Your Honors and the interested parties to discuss and hopefully resolve the competing interests that now pervade this case,” Sorkin wrote in the letter filed in court.

It also said Ruth Madoff owns certain assets “free and clear of any wrongdoing by Mr Madoff.” The assertion is not new — it came up in court documents filed March 2 — but Sorkin’s letter said prosecutors and the SEC may not have the same view.

It is not yet known who would serve in the new role. The interim trustee would work alongside Irving Picard, the trustee winding down the Madoff brokerage firm and recovering those assets to pay back former customers, lawyers involved in the case said.

US authorities have already seized a house in Florida belonging to Madoff and his wife, Ruth, as well as three vessels and a boat trailer in Ruth Madoff’s name. The government said in court papers that the proceeds would be distributed pro rata to the former customers in the fraud.

The government papers also indicated it was filing additional information under seal in an FBI agent’s affidavit, saying that the material “contains nonpublic investigative details” about the case.

Madoff and his outside accountant are the only two people charged in the case so far.

The cases are US v Madoff 09—213 US District Court for the Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

Securities and Exchange Commission v. Madoff 08-10791 U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

Bernard L. Madoff 09-11893 US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.