Former Madoff Director of Operations Charged for Role in Ponzi Scheme
By Securities Law on Feb 26, 2010 | In Legal Actions, Marketplace, Individual Investors, Criminal
Another brick in the Madoff scam crumbles under further investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). On February 25, 2010, the former Director of Operations at Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, LLC (BMIS), Daniel Bonventre, was charged for his involvement in the multi-billion dollar fraud.
At BMIS, Bonventre oversaw the firm’s accounting and securities clearing functions for about the last thirty years. The SEC’s complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, made several allegations about Bonventre’s role in the scam.
According to the SEC complaint, Bonventre allegedly falsified financial reports to investors to avoid disclosing the firm’s massive liabilities. BMIS financial reports were allegedly doctored by Bonventre to inappropriately state how investor funds were being used and maintained.
The SEC alleges that Bonventre was aware that billions of investor funds were not being used to purchase securities on behalf of investors, and worked alongside Madoff and others to disguise the information. When BMIS came under review, Bonventre and others allegedly produced reams of false reports and data filled with “serial misrepresentations.”
George S. Canellos, Director of the SEC’s Regional New York Office said, “A fraud of this magnitude requires a coordinated effort. Bonventre played an essential part by creating bogus financial records to give BMIS the appearance of legitimacy, when in fact the firm lost money and could not have survived without the fraud.”
To hide that BMIS was consistently operating at a significant loss, the firm allegedly used over $750 million in investor funds to artificially improve reported revenue and income.
Finally the SEC alleges that the former Director of Operations made an estimated $1.9 million in illicit personal profits through fake backdated trades in his own investor accounts at BMIS. One such trade was backdated by twelve years.
If convicted on all charges, Bonventre, 63, faces up to 77 years in prison. The SEC is also seeking to impose financial penalties and disgorgement of all ill-gotten gains.
The charges against Bonventre mark the SEC’s seventh enforcement action concerning the Madoff scam since its collapse in December 2008. Previous actions where parties have pleaded guilty to criminal charges include Madoff and BMIS, DiPascali, and auditors David G. Friehling and David G. Friehling & Horowitz CPAs, P.C. Certain feeder funds have also been charged with committing securities fraud, and two computer programmers at Madoff’s firm were charged for their role in concealing the scheme.
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