Mass. regulator sues Madoff “feeder fund” for fraud

BOSTON, (Reuters) – Massachusetts’ securities  regulators sued Fairfield Greenwich Group, a major “feeder  fund” for Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, accusing the hedge  fund of lying to investors and not exercising enough diligence  over investments that were worth billions of dollars.

The most damning accusations in the civil charges filed yesterday by Massachusetts Secretary of State William Galvin  may be that Madoff prepared executives at Fairfield Greenwich  in 2005 on how to answer federal securities regulators’  questions about him after a whistle-blower told officials he  suspected Madoff was running a fraud.

“Obviously, first of all, this conversation never took  place, Mark, OK?”, Madoff told Fairfield Greenwich General  Counsel Mark McKeefrey and Chief Risk Officer Amit  Vijayvergiya, according to a transcript Galvin included in his  complaint.

At one point on the call Madoff tells them: “I mean, the  idea is that it’s, is that we’re not the one that’s making the  decision how much to, I mean, you know, you know, we’re not the  one that’s operating the fraud.”

“When someone begins a conversation by saying these words,  that is slang for saying I am about to ask you to help me  deceive someone. That at the very least should have put them on  notice,” Galvin said in an interview.

The civil charges against Fairfield Greenwich mark the  first action against one of Madoff’s so-called “feeder funds”.
It is the first time the public has been given an indication of how Madoff, in his own words, interacted with the  hedge funds that poured billions into the scheme.

“This turns the page to a new chapter in the Madoff matter,  and if there is any hope of getting any return for Madoff  victims, we have to look at the entities that brought people to  him,” Galvin said.

Fairfield Greenwich once managed $14 billion. Galvin accused Fairfield Greenwich executives of turning a  blind eye to the fraud and abandoning their fiduciary  responsibility to investors because the company earned hundreds  of millions of dollars in fees through its relationship with  Madoff.

The complaint said Fairfield Greenwich had not carefully  evaluated Madoff’s investment model, did not visit Madoff often  and had not questioned how a one-man accounting firm, Friehling  & Horowitz, could handle all of Madoff’s assets.
It said that Fairfield principals “matter-of-factly  discussed amongst themselves the risk that Madoff would ‘blow  up,’ but did not disclose that risk to investors.”

Fairfield Greenwich pumped $14.8 million into Madoff’s  business only days before the former Nasdaq stock market  chairman was arrested last December.

Madoff, 70, pleaded guilty on March 12 to orchestrating the  biggest investment fraud in Wall Street’s history, and David  Friehling, his accountant, has been charged in connection with  the case.

Also yesterday, U.S. Marshals seized a 56-foot yacht  called “Bull” and a smaller boat in Davie near Fort Lauderdale,  Florida, and a $9.4 million mansion in Palm Beach, all  belonging to Madoff and his wife, Ruth.

The seizures came a day after a Connecticut judge froze the  assets of Madoff’s sons and five hedge fund industry officials,  including three Fairfield Greenwich executives. Assets of  Madoff’s wife and his brother, Peter, had already been frozen.

Galvin said his office was also probing Tremont Group  Holdings and looking at Maxam Capital. A Tremont spokesman  declined to comment, and Maxam’s founder Sandra Manzke could  not be reached.

A spokesman for Fairfield Greenwich called the allegations  “false and misleading” and said the firm had “conducted  vigorous and robust monitoring on an ongoing basis of the  Madoff investments.”

Fairfield Greenwich has 21 days to respond to Galvin’s  complaint. The complaint is posted on Galvin’s website,  http://www.sec.state.ma.us/sct/sctfairfield/fairfieldidx.htm.