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SEC Must "Defend Its Existence' After Madoff Lapses
2009-01-05
Jan. 5 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission may come under fire from lawmakers today for failing to quash Bernard Madoffâs alleged $50 billion Ponzi scheme after an investor alerted the agency to the suspected fraud. The House Financial Services Committee is scheduled to hear from one of Madoffâs alleged victims, securities law experts and the SECâs inspector general, David Kotz, whoâs probing the agencyâs handling of the matter. Harry Markopolos, the former money manager who says regulators didnât act on his tips about Madoff, canceled his appearance. âThe SEC will have to defend its existence,â said Donald Langevoort, a former agency attorney who teaches securities law at Georgetown University in Washington. The meeting is âa way of sending a message to the SEC of Congressâs anger and dismay that this happened, especially given all the things that have happened in the last six to eight months,â such as the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., he said. Markopolos, 52, a former chief investment officer at Rampart Investment Management in Boston, is now a financial fraud investigator for institutional investors. Other witnesses include Stephen Harbeck, president of Securities Investor Protection Corp.; Allan Goldstein, a retiree who invested with Madoff; Leon Metzger, a former executive with hedge-fund firm Paloma Partners LLC; and Boston University law professor Tamar Frankel. Kotz is the only SEC employee set to testify. Markopolos withdrew, citing an illness, according to the office of Representative Barney Frank, the committeeâs chairman. SEC spokesman John Nester declined to comment on the pending hearing. âSubstantial Rewriteâ Madoffâs firm was examined at least eight times in 16 years by regulators following up on e-mailed tips that described his business practices as âhighly unusual,â the Wall Street Journal reported earlier today. Madoff himself was interviewed at least twice by SEC officials, the newspaper said. The hearing, scheduled for 2 p.m. in Washington, will help guide Congressional leaders as they weigh a âsubstantial rewrite of the laws governing the U.S. financial markets,â Representative Paul Kanjorski, a Pennsylvania Democrat who leads a subcommittee overseeing capital markets, said in a Dec. 31 statement. In a speech last month, President-elect Barack Obama said the Madoff scandal shows âhow badly reform is needed.â Whether the agency should be beefed up or dismantled will be a likely topic at meetings this year about the SECâs future. âIt would be a big mistake for the hearing to start focusing on throwing more money at the SEC, until the question has been answered about whether the agency is using the resources that it has adequately,â said Jacob Frenkel, a former SEC attorney now at Shulman Rogers Gandal Pordy & Ecker in Rockville, Maryland. Free on Bail Madoff, 70, was arrested Dec. 11 and charged at federal court in Manhattan with securities fraud after allegedly telling his sons his investment advisory business was a Ponzi scheme, in which early investors are paid with money from subsequent participants. Madoff is free on bail and hasnât formally responded to the charges or entered a plea. Madoffâs clients included banks, hedge funds, charities, universities and wealthy individuals. They had about $37 billion with Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, according to a Bloomberg News tally of disclosures and press reports. SEC Chairman Christopher Cox said Dec. 16 that he asked Kotz to review how the agency responded to tips about Madoff and to find ways to improve internal policies. The staff failed to act for almost a decade on ââŹĹcredible and specificâ⏠Florida Accountants The SECâs investigators had a brush with Madoff in 1992 while suing two Florida accountants for allegedly selling $441 million in unregistered securities. The regulator, then headed by Republican Richard Breeden, said the accountants began raising money in 1962 and placing it with Madoff while promising investors returns of 13.5 percent to 20 percent, according to court documents obtained by Bloomberg. Auditors hired to unravel the case asked Madoff for copies of account statements, which he provided, the records show. He wasnât accused of wrongdoing. Markopolos raised his concerns with an examiner in the SECâs Boston office in 2000, saying that Madoffâs returns were too good to be true, and pressed the agency to scrutinize Madoffâs business until last year, the Wall Street Journal reported Dec. 18. In a 17-page memo from November 2005, three months after Cox became chairman, Markopolos laid out a list of âred flags,â and claimed Madoff must either be trading ahead of client orders, a practice known as front-running, or, more likely, running the worldâs largest Ponzi scheme. Front Running SEC investigators in New York, where Madoffâs firm is based, focused on front-running, and after encountering obstacles didnât finish verifying trades Madoff said were for advisory clients, a person with knowledge of the agencyâs efforts said last month. His companyâs trades were cleared through a single account at Depository Trust & Clearing Corp., making it difficult to distinguish transactions specifically for Madoffâs advisory business, the person said. Some transactions were completed through foreign brokerages, which meant the agency would have had to persuade other regulators to collect the data. Instead, SEC investigators closed the case in 2007 after Madoff agreed to register his investment advisory business. The SEC was facing criticism before Madoffâs arrest. Last yearâs collapse of investment banks Bear Stearns Cos. and Lehman Brothers tarnished the agencyâs reputation as a market watchdog, and senators such as Connecticut Democrat Christopher Dodd and Iowa Republican Charles Grassley have questioned its vigilance in enforcing securities laws. Cox, a Republican appointed by President George W. Bush, has said he will leave office at the end of the Bush administration. Obama on Dec. 18 announced his choice of brokerage regulator Mary Schapiro to succeed Cox. To contact the reporters on this story: David Scheer in New York at dscheer@bloomberg.net ; Ian Katz in Washington at ikatz2@bloomberg.net .
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