'Not diminished by his death': Shamed Bernie Madoff leaves behind long list of victims

 

In a 2013 jailhouse interview, Bernie Madoff — whose death from kidney disease stole headlines early Wednesday — once admitted that he was "ashamed" of cheating thousands of people out of their life savings.

That admission, however, may be cold comfort to the lengthy list of people who have suffered in the wake of a scandal that first broke during the financial crisis over a decade ago.

I interviewed the famed Wall Street money manager, and crook, at the federal prison in Butner, North Carolina, having covered his famous Ponzi scheme from the day it imploded in December 2008. We exchanged several letters and emails prior to our face-to-face meeting.

At the time, Madoff appeared short and slightly round with thick grey hair and, except for the orange prison suit he was wearing, looked like any grandfather you might see in New York taking their grandchildren to the park. From the first letter he sent, Madoff repeatedly told me he wanted to do the right thing.

I didn't believe him then, and still don't. But in Madoff's twisted mind it was one of the ways he showed remorse for the $65 billion dollar Ponzi scheme that turned millionaires into paupers. When news first broke that the 82-year-old cheat had died, I immediately called his lawyer Ike Sorkin.

Bernard Madoff exits the Manhattan federal court house in New York in this January 14, 2009 file photo.   REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Bernard Madoff exits the Manhattan federal court house in New York in this January 14, 2009 file photo. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo · Brendan McDermid / reuters

"Well, first thing that went through my mind many many times, there were no winners in this case," Sorkin told me. "Everybody lost and all around. The victims, the boys, his wife. No one, no one achieves any degree of success here."

Sorkin defended Madoff in 2009 when he plead guilty to 11 felony charges that included securities fraud, investment adviser fraud, mail and wire fraud, and three counts of money laundering. Looking back at Madoff, his counsel cautioned that there are always crooks trying to scam someone.

"The problem with Ponzi schemes is that they don't come to a happy ending because Ponzi schemes are successful as long as the market is going up," Sorkin told me.

"People are getting massive returns. If the market goes south, people will want money back and getting the returns that they've been promised. That's what happened with Madoff," he added.

Diana Henriques, author of the New York Times bestseller “The Wizard of Lies: Bernie Madoff and the Death of Trust,” once told me regarding Madoff: “I’ve seen him harden, actually, in his resentment towards investors, strange as it seems. Initially, when I was first in touch with him in prison, he was saying the words of remorse, he had the script down pat.”