Bernie Madoff : Scamming of America - The $50 Billion Ponzi Scheme
Forbes:"If indeed, $50 billion was lost, as apparently
Madoff claims, it is the largest such fraud in history, and one that might even shame the conman whose name is attached to this brand of deception. In
1920,
Charles Ponzi, an
Italian immigrant, began advertising that he could make a 50% return for investors in only 45 days. Incredibly,
Ponzi began taking in money from all over
New England and
New Jersey. By July of 1920, he was making millions as people mortgaged their homes and invested their life savings. As with all frauds, he was discovered to have a jail record and was indicted on 86 counts of fraud. Some tens of millions of dollars were invested with him
."
In the streamlined (if somewhat simplified) opening of
Ripped Off: Madoff and the
Scamming of
America, it is noted that "he puts a face on what we've all been feeling."
It's a succinct and accurate characterization of the man who ran an elaborate, decades-long
Ponzi scheme, bilking countless private investors and charities out of an estimated $65 billion dollars. The disclosure of his fraud, in the midst of the worst economic landscape since the
Great Depression, grafted the face of a real-life villain onto the greed and excess of the
Bush years--it's hard to personify (or even understand) a credit default swap or a
NINA loan, but this was a guy that we could
point at and say, "Him! Get him!"
The History Channel's short documentary examination of the
Madoff scandal utilizes interviews with journalists, historians, and victims, in addition to some excellent archival footage (particularly those chilling tapes of Madoff holding court in the late
1990s as a wise elder statesman of the financial world). The special contains some valuable biographical information, not only of Madoff's humble beginnings as a Queens-born stock broker, but of
Carlo Ponzi (the namesake of the Ponzi scheme) and other con artists who operated in Madoff's style, though perhaps not to his excess.
There's plenty of solid information to be found here--how the lure of the Madoff investment was its exclusivity (he didn't let just anyone throw away their money with him) and it's slow steady performance (one victim notes, quite convincingly, "this was not a get-rich-quick scheme"); the tale of
Harry Markopolis, the financial analyst who attempted, for the better part of a decade, to alert the
SEC that Madoff was a crook; and the tragic story of
Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet, the hedge fund
operator who responded to the news that his fund's $1.4 billion investment with Madoff wasn't worth the paper it was printed on by slashing his wrists in his
Manhattan office.
The documentary moves a breakneck pace, a flurry of images and definitions and images and soundbites, though for all of the information it contains, it occasionally sacrifices nuance for the sake of a quick pulse. The misfortune of Ripped Off is that it follows
Frontline's superior examination of the scandal, The Madoff
Affair, into the marketplace; that program was simply stronger, with better access to more people on the inside and a more in-depth analysis of the Madoff story.
Taken on its own terms, however, Ripped Off is a solid, if less than spectacular, television documentary program.