Fresh details about the alleged billion-dollar Ponzi scheme run by Bernard L. Madoff are emerging as the accused swindler prepares for a possible guilty plea in federal court Thursday.
Annette Bongiorno, a longtime aide to Madoff, allegedly instructed two assistants to create trading tickets, now believed to be bogus, using research of daily share prices for blue-chip stocks, the Wall Street Journal reported today.
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The “tickets” would show purported trades that Madoff made, which were in line with the annual profit reports Madoff issued to investors.
The information comes from two assistants who were interviewed by federal authorities last month through so-called proffer agreements, in which prosecutors agree not to use their statements against them as long as they tell the truth, according to the Journal.
Such fact-gathering doesn’t mean that prosecutors will determine there was any criminal liability. To date, no one save for Madoff has been charged with a crime. The Journal report notes that large-scale fraud investigations often begin with lower-level employees to find out what they knew about the work of their supervisor or other managers, then continue to climb up the ladder
Bongiorno, 60, was once Madoff’s personal secretary and later oversaw some of the firm’s oldest accounts.
The role of another Madoff employee, chief financial officer Frank DiPascali, is also being examined as part of the ongoing probe, the Journal reports.
Bongiorno and DiPascali were longtime neighbors in the Howard Beach neighborhood of Queens, and she is said to have introduced him to Madoff, according to a Bloomberg News report.
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