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The inside story of Bernie Madoff and his $65 billion Ponzi scheme, with surprising and shocking new details from Madoff himself.
Who is Bernie Madoff, and how did he pull off the biggest Ponzi scheme in history?
These questions have fascinated people ever since the news broke about the respected New York financier who swindled his friends, relatives, and other investors out of $65 billion through a fraud that lasted for decades. Many have speculated about what might have happened or what must have happened, but no reporter has been able to get the full story until now.
In The Wizard of Lies, Diana B. Henriques of The New York Times who has led the paper’s coverage of the Madoff scandal since the day the story broke has written the definitive book on the man and his scheme, drawing on unprecedented access and more than one hundred interviews with people at all levels and on all sides of the crime, including Madoff’s first interviews for publication since his arrest. Henriques also provides vivid details from the various lawsuits, government investigations, and court filings that will explode the myths that have come to surround the story.
A true-life financial thriller, The Wizard of Lies contrasts Madoff's remarkable rise on Wall Street, where he became one of the country’s most trusted and respected traders, with dramatic scenes from his accelerating slide toward self-destruction. It is also the most complete account of the heartbreaking personal disasters and landmark legal battles triggered by Madoff’s downfall the suicides, business failures, fractured families, shuttered charities and the clear lessons this timeless scandal offers to Washington, Wall Street, and Main Street.
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First published April 26, 2011
She also extensively delves into the question of how a crime this big is kept going over more than 20 years although Madoff's initial foray into duping investors turns out to be in the early 1960's. Rightly so, the Securities and Exchange Commission is played as the Keystone Kops as they launch one ineffective investigation after another. Henriques is a smart enough writer to realize when their bungling makes Madoff seem like the rebellious anti-hero. To keep Madoff in perspective for the reader, she inserts stories about how he indulges his boys' whims for multi-million dollar Manhattan and Long Island real estate by digging into the money investors gave him to manage.
The author also does a thorough job of answering the question "who knew". She makes a convincing case that only Madoff, his lieutenant and a small number of operations personnel knew of the fraud. It seems clear that his wife, brother and boys were fooled along with some of the most powerful and wealthy people. Henriques fully covers the pain they are subjected to - in Bernie's brother Peter's case a lengthy prison sentence and his son his suicide - because of the assumption that they knew about the scam. She also looks into whether any of his wealthy client collaborated on it concluding, along with Bernie, that one figured it out and took advantage of it to the tune of $7.2 billion (with a "b").
Henriques also does a nice job over laying out the mechanics of the fraud. Madoff and the small group of operations people who assisted with the deception built false computer systems that mimicked real trading systems well enough to fool government investigators and others. The scenes of the SEC watching his fraudulent handiwork would make for compelling movie scene.
While Henriques's is not a great storyteller, her prose represents the clean, crisp word choice and vocabulary of a seasoned journalist. She brings an objective and savvy perspective on this most slippery of subjects.
In short, pick up this fascinating and amazing epic story is well worth your time.