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Charities still stung by Madoff scandal year later

Fri Dec 11, 2009 6:00 AM EST
us-news, business, us, scandal, madoff, charities, bernard-madoff, madoff-scandal, nancy-falchuk
David B. Caruso, Associated Press
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showing 1 of 3 photos
<p>FILE - In this file photo of March 12, 2009, investor in the Madoff Ponzi scheme, Sharon Lissauer wipes away tears while talking about Madoff outside federal court in New York. A year after Madoff's scheme collapsed - with headlines of $65 billion in losses - investigators are still struggling to measure the full scope and impact of the largest securities fraud in history and are looking at other possible suspects. Losing everything in the Ponzi scheme is "not a nightmare I'm going to wake up from," one investor, Sharon Lissauer, said in a recent interview. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)</p>

FILE - In this file photo of March 12, 2009, investor in the Madoff Ponzi scheme, Sharon Lissauer wipes away tears while talking about Madoff outside federal court in New York. A year after Madoff's scheme collapsed - with headlines of $65 billion in losses - investigators are still struggling to measure the full scope and impact of the largest securities fraud in history and are looking at other possible suspects. Losing everything in the Ponzi scheme is "not a nightmare I'm going to wake up from," one investor, Sharon Lissauer, said in a recent interview. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

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NEW YORK — Nancy Falchuk will never forget the phone call. She was in Boston, it was raining and the news was bad. Hadassah, the century-old Jewish charity she had been elected to lead a year earlier, had just lost a big chunk of its endowment in a Ponzi scheme — maybe as much as $90 million.

The man responsible for this disaster, the world would soon know, was Bernard Madoff.

"I don't even say his name anymore," Falchuk said in a phone interview this week.

The leaders of scores of charities around the country, and the world, found themselves living a similar nightmare in the days after Madoff's Dec. 11, 2008, arrest on charges he orchestrated the multibillion-dollar fraud, which affected thousands of investors.

With the global financial crisis in full bloom, 2009 was already shaping up to be a grim year for charities, but few have had such rough going as the philanthropies that learned a year ago Friday that some or all of their finances had been wiped out in the Madoff scandal.

Some, like the $1 billion Picower Foundation, the $240 million Betty and Norman F. Levy Foundation and the $198 million Chais Family Foundation, lost everything and shuttered within days.

Others survived. They have spent the year cutting staff, curtailing grants and hoping, often in vain, that new donors would step in and help replenish what they lost.

"It has been a very difficult year," said Richard Gordon, president of the American Jewish Congress, which saw a $21 million trust left to it by philanthropists Lillian and Martin Steinberg vanish in the fraud. "Like anything else, you go through anger and outrage, and over the year, I think you work through some of the issues. But there is a tremendous sense of loss of what you could have done."

The damage caused to charities, especially Jewish nonprofits and those that aided Israel, is still being assessed.

Scores of foundations and charitable trusts appear to have lost enough money because of Madoff, who was active in the Jewish community and knew the heads of many of the organizations that invested with him, to hinder or cripple operations. Others lost nothing but suffered anyway.

Jewish Communities of MetroWest New Jersey, a charity that didn't have a dime invested with Madoff, still had to slash operations after more than a dozen of its major donors, who had been giving $600,000 a year, were wiped out in the fraud.

Its CEO, Max Kleinman, said it had to lay off 12 people, furlough staff and cut executive salaries.

Still, the work continued.

The Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity, founded by the writer and Holocaust survivor, said in a posting on its Web site that it still managed to have "a productive year," despite losing almost all of what it thought was a $15.2 million endowment.

"Thanks to generosity from around the country and world, with donations from $5 and up, we are pleased to let you know that we are able to honor all of our commitments and continue all of our projects," the message said.

American Society for Technion, which raises money for a technological institute in Israel, said that in 2009 it raised $77 million — slightly more than the book value of its vanished Madoff investments.

There were budget cuts and a small reduction in staff, spokesman Kevin Hattori said, but no programs were canceled.

But while several charity directors said they are optimistic about the future, a few are still wondering whether more bad news lies ahead.

Over the past 12 months, investigators unraveling Madoff's finances have learned that several charities that had invested with the swindler had withdrawn millions of dollars over the years that, unbeknownst to them, were false profits stolen from other investors.

Some of those groups face the possibility that they could be asked to give that money back.

The Carl & Ruth Shapiro Family Foundation, a powerhouse in giving to hospitals and schools for decades, suspended all new grant making this year and hasn't announced when its work might resume.

It wasn't entirely wiped out by Madoff. The foundation's tax returns said it had $112.3 million left in its coffers, even after the scandal erased $145 million.

But like other charities that had invested with Madoff for many years, the philanthropy could potentially lose more of its savings in the hurricane of legal action related to the fraud.

The court-appointed trustee unraveling Madoff's affairs has filed claims against several of his investors, including Shapiro, in an attempt to force them to return bogus profits.

To date, he has refrained from getting aggressive with charities that profited from their Madoff investments, but the potential for a so-called clawback is there.

Hadassah is among the groups that could be targeted. The charity, which funds health care initiatives, Zionist education and the Hadassah Medical Organization in Jerusalem, withdrew more money from its Madoff funds than it originally put in.

So far, the trustee hasn't demanded a repayment. Nor is the organization likely to volunteer one.

"It would be very, very hard for us," said Falchuk, citing the group's fragile finances. "I can't tell our donors that I'm going to take their money and give it back to Madoff victims."

In the meantime, she said, the group has sought to streamline and refocus itself. A reorganization, already in the works before the Madoff loss, was accelerated. Nearly 100 paid staffers lost their jobs.

Falchuk said she also has worked hard to rebuild the nonprofit's reputation.

Hadassah has added 8,000 new members in recent months. It still plans to finish major projects, like construction of a new medical tower in Jerusalem, and fundraising has picked up in recent months.

But the job cuts were "painful," Falchuk said.

"It's not over," she added. "People are still angry."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (24)
Obamarunswithscissors

Boo hoo!! We got burned because of our insatiable lust for money........Boo hoo .. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.......These peoples judgment was clouded by dollars signs and look what happened......I'm sorry but I have no compassion for these greedy people.....They did it to themselves....30% return on your investment...pfft this article is sooo cliche.......PT Barnum is standing their smiling.....

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 8:45 AM EST
Norcal2

The focus on Madoff is just a side show compared to other investors doing the same thing around the country. In Arizona and Utah another financialo advisors took friends and strangers, neighbors whose losses were no less to them than Madoff's victims. The scope of investment businesses taking willing people for a ride did not start or end with Madoff.

There comes a time when the public understands that it is their money and they must be the caretakers. Putting everything into someone else's business is the folly of a fool. As sad as it is, it was predictable. We gave Madoff 150 years in prison. Other's who do it may get 5 years. It proved nothing except that the federal oversight in this area failed and many crooks came out of the woodwork to do what they do. The public was caught with their undies down. The 150 year sentence is the government's way of pretending a little too enthusiastically, a little too late, and adding to the sad joke with final joke.

  • 2 votes
#1.1 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 10:06 AM EST
Reply
NotThePest

I work for one of these Jewish Organizations that did not have anything invested with Madoff; however, like the other organizations, a lot of our big funders had either everything or the majority of their monies invested. I'm on the Financial side of the organization so I get to see daily the effects of the fall-out. As a believer in Christ, working for a Jewish Organization, i appreciate the work my company is doing because they take care of everyone from the cradled to the grave, Jews, Christians, Muslims, Buddhist, everyone is served--babies to super seniors. Stunned, you bet, but G_d is able to cause what appears to be dead rise up into new life. I'm blessed to be working for God's Chosen People and I blessed again because I'm a "brother" to Christ Jesus. We, as a group with a single purpose to serve the community, will fight on and continue into the next 120 years (the age of the organization) serving our community.

Psa 126:2-6 KJV Then was our mouth filled with laughter, and our tongue with singing: then said they among the heathen, The LORD hath done great things for them. (3) The LORD hath done great things for us; whereof we are glad. (4) Turn again our captivity, O LORD, as the streams in the south. (5) They that sow in tears shall reap in joy. (6) He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him.

  • 3 votes
Reply#2 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 9:13 AM EST
Perrie

I live in the town where Madoff lived, Roslyn NY. I personally know at least 8-10 people who lost everything to him. He used his supposed good standing within the Jewish community to lull his victims into a false sense of security and ruined them for life. This is called an affinity crime, when you prey on your own people. It is disgusting and he deserves everything he gets. I truly feel sorry for anyone taken in by this low life.

  • 2 votes
Reply#3 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 9:25 AM EST
UNCLEMIKE

Elie Wiesel's organization lost about 16 million, most of the money invested to support their operations, to Madoff. I hope Madoff lives long enough to fulfill at least a century of his sentence.

  • 1 vote
Reply#4 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 9:39 AM EST
Chris-331671

Like some have said...if it sounds to good to be true it is...I don't feel sorry for them a bit. I worked for a jewish couple for 12yrs and learned several things...they are very pro jewish and anyone else not so much...next they only do things if it makes them money...period... and if your not Jewish forget it. After 12yrs of faithful service the couple informed me they were moving to a high-rise condo and no longer needed my service and let me go and gave me a bonus of $1500 after 12 yrs of working many weekends for there parties and wine tastings. Basically what comes around goes around.

    Reply#5 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 9:55 AM EST
    Perrie

    Chris.

    .next they only do things if it makes them money...period...

    Nice sterotype. What does that say about you?

    • 2 votes
    #5.1 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 10:16 AM EST
    servus_aus_tex

    Perrie, I can identify with Chris. I used to own a commercial cleaning business in Houstson, Texas and one of my customers was a Jewish law firm and the owners were millionairs. Each floor of this building had a different alarm code for the alarm system. I had employees, but this building I cleaned personally, because of the alarm system.

    Being a law firm there were always staff of the law firm working late doing research and preparing for court. So I would do my thing and leave and most times, there was at least one of their staff still there.

    Well, you know what happened. The alarm was always getting set off by those people who were working late. The security company charged the law firm $50 for each false alarm.

    The law firm owner started insisting I was the one setting off the alarm no matter how much and how many times I insisted I didn't and it was his own staff. He knew that I didn't even set the alarms when someone was working late because they would go to one of the other floors, not know the code because the code was different for each floor, and the alarm would go off. , yet he insisted that I reimburse him for all those false alarms. It got to the point it wasn't worth the trouble, plus he was taking all my profit with all those $50 charges he claimed I owed him, so I dropped the account.

    Not only that, about a year and a half before I dropped the account, the lawyer put staff in a building next door, and expected me to start cleaning that too, with no changes in the contract, no more money. Just do it for the same money he was already paying me. Well, that building had been vacant for a long time, was filthy, and took me several weekends to clean, then an additional couple of hours every night from that point on.

    Since they were in the downtown area, there were homeless people around, and occasionally, one of them would take a poop in their parking lot. They would call me and expect me to come immediately to clean it up.

      #5.2 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 10:49 AM EST
      Perrie

      servus_aus_tex,

      My husband worked for Germans, and after 12 years of loyal service, they fired him, and he had to sue to get his severance pay. They were multi millionaires. Should I make a blanket statement about Germans? I'm sorry that you guys had bad experiences with some Jews, but that doesn't mean that they are all that way. There is good and bad in all people. Sorry that you and Chris had bad run ins, but blanket statements about group is unfair and bias.

      • 1 vote
      #5.3 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 11:07 AM EST
      servus_aus_tex

      I think the Germans get lots of blanket, general, sweeping, sterotypical statements made about them all the time and nobody cares or gets upset. But say it about the Jews, and watch out!

        #5.4 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 12:05 PM EST
        servus_aus_tex

        My husband worked for Germans, and after 12 years of loyal service, they fired him, and he had to sue to get his severance pay. They were multi millionaires. Should I make a blanket statement about Germans?

        Or maybe they were German Jews.

          #5.5 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 12:10 PM EST
          Perrie

          Wow,

          Is your hate showing.

          But for the record, not.

            #5.6 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 12:21 PM EST
            Reply
            servus_aus_tex

            I'm really skeptical of a lot of these charities themselves. How much of the donations go to enriching the people that run and work for the charity? You can't tell me a lot of these folks don't take some of those millions and invest it for themselves and make money off the whole deal.

            So corrupt in fact, it all came crashing down?

              Reply#6 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 10:35 AM EST
              Sheltiman-1510688

              Wait a min, does this make no any sense to anyone? The story starts out saying that Hadassah lost "maybe as much as $90 million" to Madoff. Later it says that that this same charity might be a liable for $$ to the court appointed trustee becuse "The charity, , withdrew more money from its Madoff funds than it originally put in." So the $90mil is a PAPER LOSS, not a real loss. That's like saying I lost $50k on my house in the last 2yrs even though it is still worth $75k more than what I paid for it 8 yrs ago. Boo Hoo, Who is going to make me whole again?!? I've had enough of this victim mentality.

                Reply#7 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 10:38 AM EST
                bitemyass

                i dont feel one bit sorry for her or the charity. With over 90 million sitting arougd in banks, that should by in use helping the world's starving people and other causes. Instead they were trying to make big interest on it rather than use the money for the purpose that it was donated to them for. SHAME ON THEM. They got greedy and now they have little or nothing,

                  Reply#8 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 10:58 AM EST
                  TT5AHS

                  did you see the picture of the broad, Nancy Fatchick up top? She should have taken 20 bucks from the fund and got a decent haircut and permanent.

                    Reply#9 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 11:38 AM EST
                    String Being

                    Actually-wise we could use a man of Bernie Madoff's caliber to help save Social Security. His experience with Ponzi schemes would be invaluable... plus he wouldn't technically be a criminal anymore if he was a congressman. It would be a win-win situation.

                    • 1 vote
                    Reply#10 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 11:51 AM EST
                    NotThePest

                    Hate abounds greatly here. Remember with the same measure you judge others will be the same measure others will judge you. Be careful that the "sins' you are pointing out in others do not dwell in you.

                    I am working for a Jewish Organization that serves everyone who walks through their doors. In fact the biggest population that they currently serve is Chinese and Hispanic. If the population of the 'hood shifts, we will serve them too.

                    What I see on this blog are people who judge themselves by their intentions and not their behavior; but judge others by their perceived behavior and does not include or seek to find out the intentions, demanding from others what they fail to demand in themselves.

                    • 1 vote
                    Reply#11 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 12:44 PM EST
                    servus_aus_tex

                    Oh I think we all know that the charities do help people who walk through the door, BUT those people running lots of these charities with mutiple millions of dollars in the bank, are also making a very comfortable living for themselves at the same time.

                    As one poster stated, all those millions sitting in the bank is earning quite a bit of interest, and where there is that kind of money, there is lots of creative accounting and book work, shall we say. There's more than just a few living a lavish lifestyle off the backs of these charities

                    Isn't there some saying that when you help others you help yourself. Literally, apparently in some cases.

                    See what Bernie Madoff did is not an isolated thing. That kind of thing is RAMPANT at Wall Street, and the big banks. It is also rampant in these charities that hold all this money. Lots of the folks involved in these charities, while helping others, are skimming a neat profit off it for there own benefit.

                      #11.1 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 12:58 PM EST
                      Perrie

                      If you want to know how your money is being spent on charities use this non-profit group

                      http://www.charitynavigator.org/

                      All big business is in the business of making profits, whether it is banking, drugs, oil. That is what they do. That is why they are traded on Wall Street and why people invest. That is life in the real world.

                      Hate abounds greatly here. Remember with the same measure you judge others will be the same measure others will judge you. Be careful that the "sins' you are pointing out in others do not dwell in you.

                      I couldn't agree more.

                        #11.2 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 1:34 PM EST
                        servus_aus_tex

                        And where there is lots of money, there is lots of creative accounting and bookkeeping, and usually two sets of books. That's not just Wall Street and banking, pharmeceuticals and oil. It is these charities also.

                          #11.3 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 1:41 PM EST
                          Reply
                          NotThePest

                          Oh I think we all know that the charities do help people who walk through the door, BUT those people running lots of these charities with mutiple millions of dollars in the bank, are also making a very comfortable living for themselves at the same time.

                          It is very easy to trace the money if you have the time and the inclination, as an Accountant I Know. A charity, at least in New York State, has to be registered with the state's State Department and the Atorney General's office. Eventhough they don't pay taxes, they still have to file paperwork declaring what they have done with their money. That also means the bank accounts are exposed for all to see. servus_aus_tex keeps making these off-the-wall and off-the-cuff remarks with no back up, no examples except for his/her "everyone knows, we all know" comments as if thay makes what is stated truth, it does not.

                          I'm out of here but I will leave you with the Words of Jesus:

                          .

                          Luke 7:31-32 (Today's New International Version)

                          31 Jesus went on to say, "To what, then, can I compare the people of this generation? What are they like? 32 They are like children sitting in the marketplace and calling out to each other:
                          " 'We played the pipe for you,
                          and you did not dance;
                          we sang a dirge,
                          and you did not cry.'

                          Let's see "children" are by nature, impulsive, immature, lack critical thinking skills and function with brains that are not developed.

                          I'll leave you children to play your pretend games with each other. Remember when it gets dark outside you need to go home or the boggy man might get you.

                            Reply#12 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 2:03 PM EST
                            servus_aus_tex

                            NotthePest....It is very easy to trace the money if you have the time and the inclination, as an Accountant I Know. A charity, at least in New York State, has to be registered with the state's State Department and the Atorney General's office. Eventhough they don't pay taxes, they still have to file paperwork declaring what they have done with their money.

                            That's where that second, alternative set of books comes in real handy.

                              Reply#13 - Fri Dec 11, 2009 3:21 PM EST
                              TT5AHS

                              madoff should die in prison for what he did and the anguish he caused

                                Reply#14 - Mon Dec 14, 2009 1:50 PM EST
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