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Madoff fraud’s last days recounted in NYC report

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Mary Galligan, the head of the FBI’s New York office, said the government has known for years that the Ponzi scheme was not the work only of Madoff, who pleaded guilty to fraud and insisted he acted alone.

“Each of the defendants in his or her way allegedly played a key role in designing, building or maintaining the house of cards. The habitual doctoring of books and records, the fictitious trades, the phantom accounts, were the core of the charade,” she said.

Eric Breslin, a lawyer for Crupi, said his client’s conversation with DiPascali was important evidence because it shows DiPascali didn’t tell her about the fraud until days before Madoff revealed it his sons and he was arrested.

Attorney Gordon Mehler, who represents O’Hara, said: “Nearly four years have passed since Madoff confessed, and the indictment against the five Madoff employees has now expanded to more than 150 pages. But neither the passage of time nor the extreme length of the indictment has weakened Jerry O’Hara’s resolve to fight the charges against him.”

Larry H. Krantz, attorney for Perez, said: “We will be vigorously defending against the charges.”

Other lawyers did not respond to messages seeking comment.

As the government tells it, the fraud appears to have started in a measured way in the 1970s as phony documents were regularly manufactured to make it appear investor funds were being invested. Lists of bogus trades of securities were based on data gleaned from published sources of market information.

By the 1990s, according to the indictment, Madoff leaned on his back-office workers to produce and mail thousands of pages of statements to customers of his “split-strike conversion strategy,” an investing technique based on a model basket of S&P 100 stocks that he claimed was unique. Prosecutors say no trades occurred.

Meanwhile, he also had hired O’Hara and Perez, who created software programs that made it easier to churn out thousands of bogus securities trades that could be used in phony statements to investors, the government said.

All the while, Madoff was telling investors they were making up to 45 percent in annual gains.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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