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Tag: Cohmad Securities
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Ruth Madoff withdrew $15M before husband’s arrest
The wife of accused Wall Street swindler Bernard Madoff pulled millions out of a brokerage account only days before her husband was charged with securities fraud – including $10 million on the eve of his arrest, Massachusetts’ top securities regulator said Wednesday.
Massachusetts Secretary of State William Galvin said Ruth Madoff withdrew $5.5 million on Nov. 25 and $10 million on Dec. 10, according to reports produced by Cohmad Securities, a firm co-owned by her husband.
Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map

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(requires Java)MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.Ruth Madoff’s role in her husband’s alleged $50 billion Ponzi scheme has been a subject of much debate. To date, she has not been charged with any crime, and though she currently lives with her husband, who is under house arrest in their Upper East Side penthouse, she can come and go as she pleases.
Attorney Ira Sorkin, who represents both Madoffs, has said the financier admitted to his wife and their two sons only on Dec. 10 that his multibillion-dollar hedge fund was an elaborate Ponzi scheme. The 70-year-old mogul was arrested and charged with securities fraud on Dec. 11. Madoff told authorities he acted alone in confessing to the fraud, prosecutors have said.
But the revelation of Ruth Madoff’s withdrawals raises fresh questions about what she knew and when she knew it.
The information about her withdrawals was made public today as part of a lawsuit that Calvin brought against Cohmad Securities in an effort to revoke its Massachusetts brokerage license.
For years, Cohmad Securities, partly owned by Madoff, was a major conduit into his Ponzi scheme and received monthly payments from him for “professional services”, “brokerage services” and “fees for account supervision,” Galvin’s office said.
The payments totaled $67 million and made up 84 percent of Cohmad’s total income over the last eight years, the documents show.
That sum does not include commissions paid to broker Robert M. Jaffe, according to the complaint, because Cohmad did not respond to requests for that information.
Jaffe – a member of the wealthy Shapiro clan, major philanthropic donors in Boston and Palm Beach, Fla. – appeared under subpoena before Massachusetts regulators last week, but invoked his rights under the Fifth Amendment, declining to answer questions about his business, Cohmad, or his connection to Madoff Investments, according to the complaint.
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Related stories on Muckety- Cohmad Securities, Robert Jaffe face tough questions about Madoff ties – January 15, 2009
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This post is tagged with: Bernard Madoff, Cohmad Securities, Ira Sorkin, Madoff, Recent Stories, Robert Jaffew, Ruth MadoffRead related stories: Madoff · Recent Stories
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Judd Gregg withdraws as commerce secretary nomineeFebruary 12, 2009 at 5:23pm
Republican Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire withdrew his nomination as commerce secretary Thursday, citing “irresolvable conflicts” with President Barack Obama over his stimulus plan and handling of the 2010 census.
Cohmad Securities, Robert Jaffe face tough questions about Madoff ties
Investigators probing Bernard Madoff’s alleged $50-billion scheme are looking at the role played by an investment firm that he co-founded with an old friend from Long Island that recruited hundreds of investors from New York, Boston and Florida.
Cohmad Securities and its vice president, Robert Jaffe of Palm Beach and Boston, have already been subpoenaed by Massachusetts regulators in connection with the federal investigation of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities.
Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map

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(requires Java)MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.The company, which seemed to function almost as a Madoff subsidiary, was founded by Madoff and his friend and former neighbor, Maurice “Sonny” Cohn, a little more than two decades ago. Cohmad – a name fashioned out of the first three letters of Cohn and Madoff – had its New York offices in the same midtown Manhattan building as Madoff’s investment firm.
Cohn, a benefactor of Long Island’s North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System, owns about 80 percent of Cohmad, according to the Wall Street Journal; Madoff is a minority stakeholder, along with Cohn’s daughter, Marcia, and Madoff’s brother, Peter.
Another stakeholder is Jaffe, a debonair philanthropist who helped recruit dozens of investors from his stomping grounds around the Palm Beach Country Club and the suburbs of Boston.
Jaffe, who is listed as Cohmad’s vice president, has another major tie to Madoff: He is married to Ellen Shapiro Jaffe, daughter of 95-year-old apparel mogul Carl Shapiro, a decades-old friend of Madoff’s who was one of his earliest and largest investors. By the end, Shapiro is said to have had $545 million with Madoff.
It’s a strange turnabout for Jaffe, a 64-year-old bon vivant who was sought out in Palm Beach high society, at least in part because he could deliver access to Madoff whose legendary fund guaranteed steady, if unremarkable returns.
A champion golfer with multiple country club memberships, Jaffe seems to have done many of his deals on the golf course or on the party circuit.
He is also a fixture of the philanthropic worlds of both Palm Beach and Boston, where he rubbed shoulders with prospective investors on boards ranging from the Palm HealthCare Foundation, which he chairs, to the American Cancer Society’s Palm Beach chapter to Boston’s Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
“He was a very fastidious dresser. Never had a hair out of place,” Richard Rampell, a Palm Beach accountant told Reuters. “He stands ram-rod straight and has sort of a dashing presence,” Rampell added, likening him to characters found in novels by F. Scott Fitzgerald, author of The Great Gatsby.
But if Jaffe helped Madoff recruit an ever-expanding list of high-net-worth clients, he is now a target of fury.
At the ritzy Mar-a-Lago Club, an angry investor who lost millions with Madoff confronted Jaffe at a party last month. His son’s engagement party at the Palm Beach Country Club was abruptly canceled. And after he failed to show up for an interview with Massachusetts regulators Tuesday, the secretary of state filed suit to force Jaffe to testify.
A spokesman for Jaffe said he is under a “doctor’s care” and that he had no knowledge of the alleged fraud and was a victim himself.
“Was he out selling Madoff? Yes. Did he use his contacts to sell the product? Yes. But he’s as much a victim,” Lawrence Sperber, a Boston lawyer who has a home in Palm Beach and has known Jaffe for more than 40 years, told the Boston Globe. “I don’t think he had any idea. And he’s messed up his relationship with the rest of the world.”
Cohmad’s filings show that the company, which had fewer than 650 client accounts, made 99.7% of its sales from brokerage services to Madoff’s larger broker-dealer, according to the Journal.
In its audited financial statements for the 12 months ending June 30, 2008, Cohmad said revenue from Madoff Securities totalled $3,736,829. Its total sales for the same period were $3,748,397.
Steven Paradise, a Vinson & Elkins lawyer representing Sonny and Marcia Cohn, denied that either of them knew of the alleged fraud or solicited investors for Madoff – and that both had lost money with him. “To the extent Mr. Jaffe was soliciting investors for Madoff, he was not doing so through or for Cohmad,” he said, adding that Cohmad paid rent to Madoff to lease its space.
Madoff, 70, was charged Dec. 11 with securities fraud for allegedly running a Ponzi scheme — paying one set of investors with money from another. He is free on $10 million bail, pending trial.
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Related stories on Muckety- Madoff used social, family networks to rake in billions – December 28, 2008
- Madoff adjusts to life in a gilded jail – his neighbors not so much – December 19, 2008
- Top Madoff players hire lawyers with ties to SEC, Justice department – December 18, 2008
- Trading legend Bernard Madoff charged with ‘massive’ securities fraud – December 11, 2008
- Schapiro likely to be questioned about Madoff ties – December 19, 2008
- Lymphoma foundation escapes Madoff wrecking ball – December 20, 2008
- Feds rescue GMAC despite Ezra Merkin’s leadership – December 31, 2008
- Are Madoff’s attorneys cutting a deal? – January 13, 2009
- Madoff’s victims span the globe, from Palm Beach to Paris – December 15, 2008
- Prosecutor: Madoff sent emeralds and diamonds to relatives, friends – January 7, 2009
This post is tagged with: Bernard L. Madoff, Carl Shapiro, Cohmad Securities, Ellen Jaffe, Madoff, Marcia Cohn, Maurice Cohn, News, Recent Stories, Robert Jaffe0 Comments
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Apple’s Timothy Cook steps up – againJanuary 16, 2009 at 11:14am
The news that Steve Jobs will be taking medical leave from Apple Inc. has once again thrust Timothy D. Cook, Apple chief operating officer, onto center stage.
1 Comments
#1. LT 02.12.2009
That’s right – follow the money – doesn’t it make you wonder how much money Ellen Jafee, wife of Robert Jaffee, withdrew in the days leading up to the Madoff confession? How about withdrawals by the wife of the head of Fairfield Securities in Conn?
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