By Mike Steffanos
As we continue to wait for the New York Mets to start looking like a playoff contender, I found myself facing a choice: spend more words opining on how much it deeply sucks to watch your baseball team continue to underperform, or find something else to write about. I gladly made the second choice.
I went through my recent clip file of stories to find something interesting that I haven't had the opportunity to comment upon yet and realized that I hadn't written anything about the death of Bernie Madoff on April 14th. Thanks to the reliance of previous Mets owners upon Madoff dollars to keep the team afloat, the collapse of Madoff's Ponzi scheme impacted the Mets for over a decade until the Wilpons were finally forced to sell.
Fred Wilpon, who recommended Madoff’s supposed financial wizardry to many close friends, including the Hall of Fame pitcher Sandy Koufax, called it the biggest betrayal of his life, and once likened it to a serrated knife being plunged into his heart.
This overlooks the Wilpons' and partner Saul Katz's culpability in placing such absolute trust in a man whose unprecedented returns on investment had been questioned for years as simply too good to be true. You could say that the Wilpons and Katz relied on the fact that the SEC had allowed Madoff to operate for more than two decades, but it was no secret that the SEC was pretty weak thanks to the deregulation of that era. For men who were sophisticated enough to become quite rich in New York Real Estate, the blind trust they put into Bernie Madoff was almost pathetic.
Bernie Madoff himself questioned why he hadn't been discovered much earlier. Quoting from a piece in The Guardian from July 2009, attorney Joseph Cotchett, one of the lawyers investigating Madoff's crimes, commented on an interview with the disgraced financier:
[Cotchett] said that Madoff had told him his scheme "was pretty open and straightforward, and he hid everything, but hid it in an inept way"...
...Cotchett said Madoff had told him "you didn't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out what was going on. What happened here was when you're getting the kinds of returns [that Madoff reported to clients], you might have a tendency to look the other way, rather than asking questions".
Cotchett told reporters outside the North Carolina prison that Madoff had said: "There were several times that I met with the SEC and thought: 'They've got me'."
If the Wilpons and Saul Katz were "victims" of Bernie Madoff, that seems to me a pretty loose interpretation of the word. As Madoff noted, it didn't take a rocket scientist to discern that continuous great returns, year in and year out without fail, were indeed too good to be true. Any legitimate money manager, even a great one, was going to have some ups and downs. But whether any given year featured an up market or a down one, Madoff investors inevitably made money. The returns were too good to believe, but not believing would mean saying goodbye to all that cash.
The Mets ownership simply couldn't question those uncanny returns because their continued operation of the New York Mets baseball club completely depended upon that money. They were apparently incapable of running the club as a successful business, despite operating in the largest market in the country. Walstein's piece linked to above noted that the Mets suffered huge yearly losses. Without the endless bounty of Madoff dollars, the Wilpon ownership of the Mets would inevitably come crashing down at some point.
Irving Picard was the trustee tasked with recovering some of the money for Madoff's victims from folks who benefitted from the scheme. He went after the Wilpons and Katz, seeking a billion dollars from them, claiming that they "had to know" that Madoff was crooked. The Mets owners ultimately settled for much less, and Picard personally made millions in his efforts to recover some money for people who had lost everything. Unlike small investors, Picard and the Mets owners made out very well in the Madoff aftermath.
The Wilpons — who likely never would have been able to take full control of the Mets without the Madoff dollars — were bailed out by MLB with a loan and allowed to continue running the club for another decade before they were finally forced to sell. These "victims" of Bernie Madoff pocketed billions from the sale. We should all be victimized in such a manner.
1 comment:
Let's hope last night was the start of something better than we have seen.
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