Markets
U.S. open in 5 hrs, 58 mins
BUSINESS NEWS
- Market News
- Earnings
- Recalls
- Recession Watch
- Tech News
- Madoff Scandal
- BloggingStocks
- Luxist
- Money Videos
INVESTING
- Stock Quotes
- Stock Charts
- Stock Ticker
- Currencies
- Portfolio
- Stock Screener
- Broker Center
- Mutual Fund Center
- ETF Center
- Money
- 24/7 Wall St.
- Financial Glossary
PERSONAL FINANCE AT WALLETPOP
- Bargains
- Banking
- Budget
- Calculators
- College Finance
- Community
- Credit
- Deals
- Debt
- Economizer
- Food
- Home
- Fraud
- Insurance
- Interest Rates
- Loans
- Mortgages
- Real Estate
- Recalls
- Recession
- Retirement
- Saving
- Simplification
- Specials
- Taxes
SMALL BUSINESS
Madoff Seeks Leniency in Sentencing
By LARRY NEUMEISTER
, AP
NEW YORK (June 23) - Bernard Madoff's lawyer has told a judge
scheduled to sentence the disgraced financier next week that 12
years in prison would be sufficient punishment for the man who
swindled tens of billions of investors' dollars in one of history's
biggest frauds.
BloggingStocks: All Eyes on Madoff June 29
But a woman who says her family was ruined financially by
Madoff's thievery said a sentence that short might only work "if
he was hung by his toes" the whole time.
The 71-year-old Madoff faces up to 150 years in prison after
pleading guilty on March 12 to 11 felony counts including
securities fraud and perjury. He admitted operating a massive
pyramid scheme for decades. Federal sentencing guidelines call for
Madoff to receive a life sentence.
Madoff attorney Ira Sorkin said in court papers made public
Tuesday that his client "will speak to the shame he has felt and
to the pain he has caused" when U.S. District Judge Denny Chin
sentences him on Monday.
"We seek neither mercy nor sympathy," Sorkin wrote. But he
urged Chin to "set aside the emotion and hysteria attendant to
this case" as he determines the sentence.
Sorkin said a sentence of a dozen years in prison would
acknowledge Madoff's voluntary surrender, full acceptance of
responsibility, meaningful cooperation efforts and the nonviolent
nature of his crime.
Still, the lawyer added that a prison term of 15 to 20 years
would not disproportionately punish Madoff compared to sentences
given other white collar criminals.
"Indeed, such a range will appropriately eliminate concerns for
disparate treatment among similarly situated nonviolent
offenders," he wrote.
"If we he was hung by his toes for 12 years then maybe that
sentence would be acceptable," said Candace Newlove of Nederland,
Colorado. She said her family was financially ruined by Madoff.
Newlove, who is selling her home, said she hopes the judge keeps
in mind that Madoff "had a huge impact not only on our family but
world economics and trust around the world."
Richard Roth of Jupiter, Florida, who lost several million
dollars with Madoff and has had to put his house up for sale, said
he had faith in the court system.
"The lawyers can ask for anything he wants. that doesn't mean
anything. I'm sure he's going to spend the rest of his life in
jail," he said.
Jesse Cohen, a Summit, New Jersey, man who called Madoff a
"thief and a monster" in a letter to the court, said Tuesday that
he trusts that the judge will be fair at sentencing.
Sorkin said his client has cooperated repeatedly with the
government agencies seeking to recover money for victims and figure
out how his fraud went undetected for decades.
The lawyer said Madoff met recently for several hours with the
inspector general of the Securities and Exchange Commission,
providing information and insight into his conduct and the role of
the SEC.
"The information exchanged during the meeting will no doubt
shape and fortify the future of Wall Street regulation and
oversight," Sorkin wrote, calling Madoff's participation at the
meeting "entirely voluntary."
The lawyer included in his submission to the court late Monday
an analysis of sentences given to defendants facing a potential
life sentence in fraud-related cases between 1999 and 2008 that
concluded the average sentence when leniency was not given was 15.3
years in prison.
He also noted that Madoff's age would leave him with an average
life expectancy of 12.6 more years.
In his submission, Sorkin cited dozens of letters from Madoff
victims urging Chin to make sure Madoff never gets out of prison.
"The significant anger and resentment evidence in the victims'
words is no doubt justified in light of the circumstances of this
case," Sorkin said. "Thankfully, none of the fury expressed in
the victim statements has been as shocking as the death threats and
anti-Semitic e-mails that have been directed toward Mr. Madoff and
his counsel."
Still, he added, the tone of the victim statements "suggests a
desire for a type of mob vengeance that, if countenanced here,
would negate and render meaningless the role of the court."
Sorkin said his office had advised Madoff about the letters and
"their tenor and heart-wrenching stories of loss and
deprivation."
He said he and Madoff acknowledge the "scope and magnitude of
those losses and understand the victims' calls for reprisal."
Madoff was arrested in December after he confessed to his sons
that the private investment side of his business was a fraud.
Authorities say Madoff promised investors their accounts were worth
as much as $65 billion. In reality, only several hundred million
dollars remained.
Janice Oh, a spokeswoman for federal prosecutors in Manhattan,
said the office had no comment.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-06-23 09:47:48
COMMENTS ( 1924 )
BYE BERNIE