Tag: J. Ezra Merkin

  • J. Ezra Merkin to give up control over hedge funds

    Financier and philanthropist J. Ezra Merkin assented Tuesday to step down as manager of his hedge funds and to place them into receivership.

    The step was demanded by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, who brought civil charges against Merkin last month, accusing him of fraudulent concealment and misrepresentation for steering his clients’ money to Bernard Madoff without their knowledge or permission.

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    Merkin, the former chairman of GMAC and the scion of a prominent Jewish family, funneled $2.4 billion into Bernard Madoff Investment Securities, including millions from prominent institutions like Yeshiva University.

    Some of his investors, including New York University, New York Law School and Mort Zuckerman’s charitable trust, have brought suit against him, as has the trustee liquidating Madoff’s firm.

    The agreement, announced Tuesday in New York State Supreme Court, means that Merkin will no longer control his three hedge funds, Ascot, Gabriel and Ariel, from which he reportedly collected more than $470 million in fees over the last decade.

    “Mr. Merkin is working closely with the New York Attorney General,” his attorney, Andrew Levander, said in a statement, adding that Merkin had agreed in principle to appoint Guidepost Partners as receivers for the funds while he remains available to consult regarding the wind-down.

    Justice Richard Lowe gave Cuomo and Merkin until May 28 to finalize the agreement.

    Despite his legal and financial woes, the Jewish Week reported that Merkin is the frontrunner expected to be elected chairman Wednesday of the tony Fifth Avenue Synagogue, which his father helped found.

    Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel, who lost most of the funds of his humanitarian foundation, as well as his personal savings, after investing with Madoff, will become one of two honorary chairmen.

    Despite consternation in some quarters, the Jewish Week said that Merkin has not been publicly opposed, perhaps because he has been one of the synagogue’s primary benefactors.

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    • Spitzer’s mood darkens during state testimony

      May 21, 2009 at 9:48am

      Two sides of former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s personality are revealed in recently released transcripts of two interviews he gave on the same subject under oath last year.

    • J. Ezra Merkin helps wipe out father’s legacy

      It is a tragedy of almost Biblical dimensions: The late Hermann Merkin was a lion of Jewish philanthropy who gave millions to help build Yeshiva University, the Fifth Avenue Synagogue and Merkin Concert Hall, among other causes.

      His son, J. Ezra Merkin, who took his father’s place as a director of many of those institutions, has managed to wipe out much of what Hermann Merkin spent a lifetime creating.

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      Ezra Merkin was “the Golden Boy controlling the Golden Goose,” as one trustee at Yeshiva University put it – the head of Gabriel Capital Group, a $5 billion money-management firm whose clients include wealthy families and university endowments. So it was not surprising that many institutions turned to him to help manage their endowments.

      Merkin invested their money in a $1.8 billion fund he called Ascot Partners – telling no one that Ascot was invested entirely with his longtime friend, Bernard Madoff, the Wall Street trader accused last Thursday of defrauding investors through a $50 billion Ponzi scheme.

      Now, all that money is presumed gone.

      In a three-paragraph note sent out the day that Madoff was arrested, Merkin informed Ascot’s investors that the fund was now virtually worthless. He said he himself had “suffered major losses from this catastrophe.”

      That was little consolation, however, to Hebrew University, said to have lost $110 million of its endowment; or to Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun, the Ramaz School of Manhattan and SAR Academy in Riverdale, said to have lost substantial sums; or to several family foundations belonging to Merkin’s fellow trustees at Yeshiva University, including Robert M. Beren and Ludwig Bravmann.

      Another Ascot casualty was a charitable trust founded by real-estate magnate Mortimer Zuckerman, the chairman of real-estate firm Boston Properties and owner of the New York Daily News and U.S. News & World Report. That lost $30 million.

      Harry Susman of Houston law firm Susman Godfrey LLP, who has been retained by several well-to-do New York families, told the New York Times that none of those investors knew Merkin was giving all of the money to Madoff.

      He said his clients are particularly incensed because Merkin was charging them an annual fee of 1.5 percent of their investments in exchange for his services, which now appear to be little more than turning over the money to another investor.

      “People who went through Merkin, they had to pay for the privilege of being stolen from,” Susman said.

      Indeed, even as he has portrayed himself as a victim, Merkin is being harshly criticized. Several people told Jewish Week that while they had been reluctant to invest with Madoff, they trusted Merkin completely.

      “We thought we were investing in Ezra,” said one official of a Jewish institution, “and now find out we were invested with Madoff. We feel duped and outraged.”

      One private investor said that several years ago he asked Merkin directly if his investment in Ascot was going into the Madoff fund and was told it was not.

      …Merkin has served for the last several years as chairman of the investment committee at UJA-Federation of New York. But in part because the federation has a policy prohibiting members of the committee from directing funds, there was no exposure of its funds to Ascot Partners or Madoff.

      “There were some on the board who grumbled about us missing out on a solid investment but we weathered the criticism,” one insider noted.

      Merkin is expected to be off the UJA-Federation board by week’s end.

      Yesterday, the first of what is expected to be a slew of investor lawsuits against Merkin was brought by New York Law School, which had invested $3 million in Ascot Partners.

      The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, alleges recklessness, gross negligence and breach of fiduciary duties by Merkin, the fund, Ascot Partners and its auditor, BDO Seidman LLP.

      Merkin’s lawyer, Andrew J. Levander, offered this response:

      “Mr. Merkin and his family are personally among the largest victims of the massive fraud confessed by Bernard Madoff. Like the other victims and the entire financial community, Mr. Merkin is shocked by these events. He intends to defend the lawsuit vigorously while seeking redress for himself and his investors from whoever perpetrated this fraud.”

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