Picard Vs Avellino and Bienes
Picard Vs Avellino and Bienes
45 Rockefeller Plaza
New York, NY 10111
Telephone: (212) 589-4200
Facsimile: (212) 589-4201
David J. Sheehan
Keith R. Murphy
Geraldine E. Ponto
Jonathan Barr
Jimmy Fokas
v. (Substantively Consolidated)
BERNARD L. MADOFF INVESTMENT
SECURITIES LLC,
Defendant.
In re:
BERNARD L. MADOFF,
Debtor.
Plaintiff,
Adv. Pro. No. 10-_______ (BRL)
v.
Defendants.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
COMPLAINT ..................................................................................................................................1
THE DEFENDANTS.......................................................................................................................6
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
(continued)
Page
CUSTOMER CLAIMS..................................................................................................................85
ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
(continued)
Page
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COMPLAINT
Irving H. Picard (the “Trustee”), as trustee for the liquidation of the business of Bernard
L. Madoff Investment Securities, LLC (“BLMIS”), under the Securities Investor Protection Act,
15 U.S.C. §§ 78aaa, et seq. (“SIPA”), and the substantively consolidated estate of Bernard L.
Madoff individually (“Madoff”), by and through his undersigned counsel, for his Complaint,
states as follows:
1. This adversary proceeding arises from the massive Ponzi scheme masterminded
by Madoff. Over the course of the scheme, there were more than 8,000 client accounts at
BLMIS. In early December 2008, BLMIS generated client account statements for its
approximately 4,900 open client accounts at BLMIS. When added together, these statements
purportedly show that clients of BLMIS had approximately $65 billion invested with BLMIS. In
reality, BLMIS had assets on hand worth a small fraction of that amount. On March 12, 2009,
Madoff admitted to the fraudulent scheme, pleaded guilty to 11 felony counts, and was sentenced
and entities, which Avellino, Bienes, and their family members dominated and controlled,
perpetuated and benefited from the successful operation of Madoff’s Ponzi scheme for decades.
Although Avellino and Bienes now claim to be victims of that scheme, their denial flies in the
face of facts uncovered by the Trustee. They operated BLMIS’s first feeder fund, a partnership
known as Avellino & Bienes (“A&B”), which fueled the growth of the Ponzi scheme for
decades. Throughout those many years, A&B, Avellino, Bienes, Nancy Avellino (“Mrs.
Avellino”), and Dianne Bienes (“Mrs. Bienes”) lined their pockets with millions of dollars of
other people’s money and enabled the Ponzi scheme to prosper by providing it with a consistent
source of money. Prior to its forced liquidation by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the
“SEC”) in 1992, A&B was BLMIS’s source of hundreds of millions of dollars of investor funds.
Even after the SEC shut down A&B through a federal court injunction, Avellino, Bienes, Mrs.
Avellino , Mrs. Bienes, and Avellino’s son, Thomas Avellino, continued to funnel millions of
3. Avellino, Bienes, their wives, and Thomas Avellino depended on Madoff to fund
their lavish lifestyles through the fictitious profits they received from his Ponzi scheme. For
example, Avellino and Mrs. Avellino owned multi-million dollar homes in exclusive areas in
Manhattan, Nantucket, and Palm Beach, some of which were adorned with valuable artwork
from famous artists and sculptors, such as Pablo Picasso, Edgar Degas, and Giacomo Manzu.
Thomas Avellino, who had no significant employment history and little or no experience as an
investment professional, received millions of dollars for directing investors’ money to Madoff’s
Ponzi scheme. He owned a Florida penthouse and a million dollar home in Monmouth, New
Jersey. The Bieneses owned homes in California, New York, Florida, and London. Their more
than 6,000 square foot Florida mansion included a separate 10,000 square foot party pavilion and
4. Avellino and Bienes pretended for years not to know that Madoff was operating a
fraud from which they received millions of dollars of fictitious profits, when they knew or should
have known that BLMIS was acting fraudulently. They consistently and falsely represented to
investors that their money was safely invested with a legitimate investment professional. Even
after the public collapse of BLMIS in December 2008, Bienes proclaimed on national television
in an interview with the Public Broadcasting Service’s Frontline that he and Mrs. Bienes
believed they had received millions of dollars from BLMIS because “God gave us this.” Bienes
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further falsely denied having any warning that anything was amiss at BLMIS stating: “[a]s God
as my only judge, on my mother’s grave, not an inkling, not a tickle, nothing. May [H]e strike
me dead.”
5. In reality, Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes and Thomas Avellino
knew or should have known that Madoff and BLMIS were operating a fraudulent investment
advisory business, and that the entities, which they controlled and had created, were benefiting
from the fraudulent scheme. As described in greater detail below, Avellino, Bienes, Mrs.
Avellino, Mrs. Bienes and Thomas Avellino observed blatant and obvious red flags which would
have put a reasonable person, let alone licensed Certified Public Accountants (“CPAs”) such as
Avellino and Bienes, on clear notice that BLMIS was operating fraudulently and manufacturing
fictitious trading activity reflected on its customer account statements. Upon information and
belief, as early as June 1992, while embroiled in an SEC investigation, Avellino and Bienes
knew that BLMIS had created a false A&B customer account with backdated account statements
detailing fabricated trades. The backdated account statements created over $65.9 million in
fictitious value in an effort to assist Avellino and Bienes in deceiving government investigators.
The purpose of this phony account was to cover a shortfall of at least $29.8 million between
money owed by A&B to its investors and the balances reflected in the BLMIS customer
statements for the A&B accounts. Having been confronted with a backdated account containing
fictitious trades, Avellino and Bienes knew or should have known that their investment adviser
was committing fraud. Rather than expose the creation of this fraudulent account, Avellino and
Bienes lied under oath in SEC testimony. Avellino and Bienes knew or should have known they
were participating in a fraud but chose to play along with Madoff, so they could enrich
themselves at the expense of others and continue living the lavish lifestyle they had come to
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expect. Furthermore, Avellino’s and Bienes’ knowledge and bad faith should be imputed to Mrs.
Avellino and Mrs. Bienes who also profited greatly from their spouses’ misconduct.
6. After lying to the SEC to conceal their illegal conduct, and following the
consequent liquidation of A&B in November 1992, Avellino and Bienes and several of their
business associates negotiated to receive disguised compensation for recently created investment
advisory (“IA”) accounts under their control. Specifically, they requested guaranteed annual
rates of return of 17% on certain IA accounts at BLMIS they controlled, and also negotiated to
receive fraudulent side payments based upon amounts that former A&B investors had reinvested
7. From 1994 through 2007, BLMIS provided accounts controlled by Avellino and
Bienes with more than $59 million in fraudulent side payments and additional profits to meet the
guaranteed rates of return Madoff had promised to Avellino and Bienes. This disguised
compensation was not paid by conventional means such as checks or credits to an account.
Rather, Madoff furnished Avellino and Bienes with the fraudulent side payments by inserting
fictitious, highly profitable, non-hedged options transactions1 into the customer account
statements for certain IA accounts approximating the value of the promised compensation.
Despite their knowledge that fraudulent side payments were being made in the manner described
above, Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes and Thomas Avellino pretended to
outsiders that nothing untoward was occurring at BLMIS. They did so to continue to profit at
others’ expense.
8. The charade is over, and they can pretend no longer. When compelled this past
fall to explain their actions to the Trustee in investigative examinations pursuant to Bankruptcy
1
Non-hedged options transactions refer to options transactions that are inconsistent with the split-strike strategy
Madoff purported to follow.
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Rule 2004, Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Bienes, and Thomas Avellino all asserted their Fifth
Amendment rights against self-incrimination and refused to answer any questions about Madoff,
9. Avellino and Bienes spent the vast majority of their professional careers investing
and funneling money to Madoff so they could profit for decades from implausibly steady and
guaranteed returns from BLMIS. Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes, Thomas
Avellino and entities they controlled, knew or should have known, that the uninterrupted returns
they enjoyed for decades, and the blatantly fictitious trades reflected in their BLMIS IA
10. As of the date of this Complaint, the Trustee has identified at least $904,515,689
Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes, Thomas Avellino, A&B, Avellino Family Trust
(“Avellino Family Trust”), Avellino & Bienes Pension Plan & Trust (“A&B Pension Plan”)
Grosvenor Partners, Ltd. (“Grosvenor Partners”), Aster Associates (“Aster”), St. James
Associates (“St. James”), Mayfair Ventures, G.P. (“Mayfair Ventures”), Kenn Jordan Associates
(“KJA”) and Strattham Partners (“Strattham”) from April 1981 through December 11, 2008.
Many of these funds were transferred to other entities controlled by these defendants or to other
11. This adversary proceeding is brought pursuant to sections 78fff(b), 78fff-1(a) and
78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, sections 105(a), 502(d), 510(c), 544, 547, 548(a), 550(a) and 551 of title
11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”), the New York Fraudulent Conveyance
Act (New York Debtor & Creditor Law section 270 et seq. (McKinney 2001) (“DCL”)), CPLR
sections 203(g) and 213(8) (McKinney 2001) and other applicable law for avoidance and
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recovery of preferences, fraudulent conveyances, subsequent transfer of such preferences and
fraudulent conveyances, unjust enrichment, conversion, money had and received, consequential
and punitive damages, the Trustee’s disallowance of the customer claims in connection with
certain transfers of property by BLMIS to or for the benefit of certain defendants, and equitable
subordination. The Trustee seeks to avoid such transfers and preserve and recover the property
for the benefit of the BLMIS estate and BLMIS’s defrauded customers.
12. This is an adversary proceeding commenced before the same Court before which
the main underlying SIPA proceeding, No. 08-01789 (BRL) (the “SIPA Proceeding”), is
pending. The SIPA Proceeding was originally brought in the United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York as Securities & Exchange Commission v. Bernard L. Madoff
Investment Securities LLC et al., No. 08 CV 10791 (the “District Court Proceeding”) and has
been referred to this Court. This Court has jurisdiction over this adversary proceeding under 28
13. This is a core proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2)(A), (B), (F), (H), and
(O).
THE DEFENDANTS
15. Frank J. Avellino (defined earlier as “Avellino”), age 74, resides in Palm Beach,
Florida. He is a CPA and was a partner in the accounting firm of Avellino & Bienes. Avellino
began his career at the accounting firm of Alpern & Heller in or around 1958. Saul Alpern, one
of the two named partners at the firm, was Madoff’s father-in-law. In or around the 1960s,
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Avellino became a partner of this accounting firm, and it was renamed Alpern & Avellino. In or
around 1974, sometime after Bienes joined the firm and upon the retirement of Saul Alpern, the
accounting firm became known as Avellino & Bienes. Upon information and belief, Avellino
began investing with Madoff in or around 1962, and thereafter spent the majority of his
professional career investing with and, funneling other people’s money into Madoff’s Ponzi
scheme. Avellino profited exorbitantly from those efforts through withdrawals from BLMIS IA
accounts, the payment of management and professional fees, and other compensation by or
through entities he owned and controlled. Avellino’s involvement with these entities includes:
a. With Bienes, and the later involvement of Mrs. Bienes, Avellino created,
b. Upon information and belief, Avellino created, controlled, and was the
d. With Bienes, Mrs. Bienes and Mrs. Avellino, Avellino (either individually
and/or through one or more trusts for which he was the beneficiary, grantor and/or trustee)
e. With Bienes, Mrs. Bienes and Mrs. Avellino, Avellino (either individually
and/or through one or more trusts for which he was the beneficiary, grantor and/or trustee)
created, controlled and was a general partner and the co-managing partner of Mayfair Ventures,
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f. With Mrs. Avellino, Avellino (either individually and/or through one or
more trusts for which he was the beneficiary, grantor and/or trustee) created, controlled and was
h. With Bienes, Avellino created, controlled and was a director and the
president of Mayfair Bookkeeping Services, Inc. (“Mayfair Bookkeeping”), the sponsor of the
Mayfair Pension Plan (“Mayfair Pension Plan”) of which Avellino was a beneficiary.
16. Avellino controlled and benefited from at least the following BLMIS accounts
held in the names of A&B, Avellino Family Trust, A&B Pension Plan, Frank J. Avellino
Trustee, the Avellino Group, Grosvenor Partners, Mayfair Ventures, Aster, Mayfair
17. Michael S. Bienes (defined earlier as “Bienes”), age 74, resides in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida. Bienes was a CPA who joined the accounting firm of Alpern & Avellino in
1968. In or around the early 1970’s, upon information and belief, Bienes became a junior
partner in the firm and it became known as Alpern, Avellino & Bienes. By in or around 1974,
upon the retirement of Saul Alpern, the firm was renamed Avellino & Bienes. Bienes spent the
majority of his professional career investing in, and referring investors to, Madoff’s Ponzi
scheme. Through the time of the exposure of the Ponzi scheme in December 2008, Bienes
profited exorbitantly from these efforts through withdrawals from IA accounts and other
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a. With Avellino, and the later involvement of Mrs. Bienes, Bienes created,
c. With Avellino, Mrs. Bienes and Mrs. Avellino, Bienes (either individually
and through one or more trusts for which he was the beneficiary, grantor and/or trustee) created,
controlled and was a limited partner of Grosvenor Partners until in or around 2005;
d. With Avellino, Mrs. Bienes and Mrs. Avellino, Bienes created, controlled
and was a general partner of Mayfair Ventures, the general partner of Grosvenor Partners;
e. With Mrs. Bienes, Bienes (either individually and/or through one or more
trusts for which he was the beneficiary, grantor and/or trustee) created, controlled and was a
sponsor of Mayfair Pension Plan, of which Bienes was a beneficiary. Bienes was a director, the
18. Bienes controlled and benefited from at least BLMIS accounts held in the names
of A&B, A&B Pension Plan, Grosvenor Partners, Mrs. Bienes, Mayfair Ventures, St. James and
Mayfair Bookkeeping.
19. Nancy Carroll Avellino (defined earlier as “Mrs. Avellino”), age 64, resides in
Palm Beach, Florida, and is the wife of Avellino. She has profited exorbitantly from investments
with, and her husband’s referral of investors’ money to, Madoff’s Ponzi scheme through
withdrawals from IA accounts held by entities controlled by her and/or her husband. These
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entities consistently received guaranteed rates of return and received fraudulent side payments
a. With Avellino, Bienes and Mrs. Bienes, Mrs. Avellino participated in the
creation of Grosvenor Partners by signing the required entity documents and (either individually
and/or through one or more trusts for which she was the beneficiary, grantor and/or trustee)
b. With Avellino, Bienes and Mrs. Bienes, Mrs. Avellino participated in the
creation of Mayfair Ventures by signing the required entity documents and (either individually
and/or through one or more trusts for which she was the beneficiary, grantor and/or trustee)
controlled and was a general partner of Mayfair Ventures, the general partner of Grosvenor
Partners;
the creation of Aster by signing the required entity documents and (either individually and/or
through one or more trusts for which she was the beneficiary, grantor and/or trustee) controlled
20. Mrs. Avellino benefited from her and/or her husband’s ownership and control of
BLMIS accounts held in the names of A&B, Grosvenor Partners, Mayfair Ventures, Aster and
Mayfair Bookkeeping. Mrs. Avellino also held BLMIS account number 1ZW009 in the name of
“NTC & CO., FBO Nancy W Carroll (xxxxx),” with the account address reported as P.O. Box
173859, Denver, Colorado, 80217. This account was opened on or about December 9, 1992.
21. Dianne K. Bienes (defined earlier as “Mrs. Bienes”), age 68, resides in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida and is the wife of Bienes. She has profited exorbitantly from investments
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with, and her husband’s referral of investors’ money to, Madoff’s Ponzi scheme from at least
1968 forward. She profited through withdrawals from IA accounts held by entities controlled by
her and/or her husband, which consistently received guaranteed rates of returns and received
fraudulent side payments from Madoff. Mrs. Bienes’ involvement with these entities includes:
a. With Avellino and Bienes, since at least January 1988, Mrs. Bienes
b. Upon information and belief, with Avellino and Bienes, since at least
January 1988, Mrs. Bienes controlled and was a beneficiary of A&B Pension Plan;
c. With Avellino, Bienes and Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes participated in the
creation of Grosvenor Partners by signing the required entity documents and (either individually
and/or through one or more trusts for which she was the beneficiary, grantor and/or trustee)
controlled and was a limited partner of Grosvenor Partners until in or around 2005;
d. With Avellino, Bienes and Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes participated in the
creation of Mayfair Ventures by signing the required entity documents and controlled and was a
general partner and the co-managing partner of Mayfair Ventures, the general partner of
Grosvenor Partners;
e. With Bienes, upon information and belief, Mrs. Bienes participated in the
creation of St. James by signing the required entity documents and (either individually and/or
through one or more trusts for which she was the beneficiary, grantor and/or trustee) controlled
22. Mrs. Bienes benefited from her and/or her husband’s ownership and control of
BLMIS accounts held in the names of A&B, A&B Pension Plan, Grosvenor Partners, Mayfair
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Ventures, St. James and Mayfair Bookkeeping. Mrs. Bienes also owned, controlled and
benefited from BLMIS account number 1B0018 in the name of “Diane [sic] K Bienes,” with the
23. Thomas G. Avellino (defined earlier as “Thomas Avellino”), age 45, resides in
Holmdel, New Jersey and is the son of Avellino. Like his father, Thomas Avellino spent the
majority of his professional career referring money to Madoff’s Ponzi scheme and profiting
Thomas Avellino’s
Strattham;
b. Thomas Avellino created, controlled and was the president and, upon
information and belief, the sole officer and director of Ascent, REDACTED
24. Thomas Avellino controlled and benefited from the IA account held in the name
from at least BLMIS accounts 1ZB046 (Grosvenor Partners) and 1ZB509 (Aster).
25. Thomas Avellino is the guardian of a minor with the initials S.A.
26. Avellino & Bienes (defined earlier as “A&B”) was a partnership registered under
the laws of the State of Florida. Upon information and belief, until in or about 1984, A&B
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functioned as both an accounting firm and an entity which raised money from investors to pool
these funds for investment with BLMIS. By 1984, A&B ceased operating as an accounting firm
to focus exclusively on profiting from its business as a feeder fund for BLMIS. A&B was
liquidated in 1992 as the result of an enforcement action brought by the SEC concerning its
investments with BLMIS. During its existence, A&B maintained at least six IA accounts in its
name at BLMIS from which it withdrew at least $446,035,308 in fictitious profits from April
1981 through January 1993. These accounts included the 1A0053 account which was
fraudulently created with backdated account statements during the SEC’s investigation. From in
or around 1974, Avellino, Bienes, and later Mrs. Bienes, were the only partners of A&B.
27. Avellino Family Trust (defined earlier as “Avellino Family Trust”) was, upon
information and belief, a Trust with an address in Palm Beach, Florida. A&B Pension Plan held
BLMIS account number 100126 in the name of “Avellino Family Trust C/O Frank Avellino.”
Upon information and belief, Avellino was the Trustee of Avellino Family Trust. Avellino
Family Trust, upon information and belief, received avoidable transfers from BLMIS account
100126.
28. Avellino & Bienes Pension Plan & Trust (defined earlier as “A&B Pension
Plan”) was, upon information and belief, a Trust with an address in Palm Beach, Florida. Upon
information and belief, Avellino and Bienes were the Trustees of A&B Pension Plan. Upon
information and belief, A&B Pension Plan was the predecessor of the Avellino & Bienes Profit
Sharing Plan and Trust and Mayfair Pension Plan, which were profit sharing plans established
for the benefit of Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Bienes, and later Mrs. Avellino, as discussed below.
A&B Pension Plan held BLMIS account number 1A0046 in the name of “Avellino & Bienes
Pension Plan & Trust C/O Frank Avellino,” with the account address reported in Fort
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Lauderdale, Florida. A&B Pension Plan, upon information and belief, received avoidable
limited partnership formed under the laws of the State of Florida with its principal place of
business in Palm Beach, Florida. Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Avellino and Mrs. Bienes created and
controlled the current general partner of Grosvenor Partners, Mayfair Ventures, as well as
predecessor general partners of this entity. Grosvenor Partners held BLMIS account number
1ZB046 in the name of “Grosvenor Partners Ltd,” with the account address reported in Palm
Beach, Florida. This account was opened on or around February 25, 1993. In addition to
receiving avoidable transfers from BLMIS account 1ZB046, Grosvenor Partners received
subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS accounts 1ZB509 (Aster),
30. Mayfair Ventures, G.P. (defined earlier as “Mayfair Ventures”) was a general
partnership formed under the laws of the State of Florida with its principal place of business in
Palm Beach, Florida. Mayfair Ventures held BLMIS account number 1ZB032 in the name of
“Mayfair Ventures,” with the account address reported in Palm Beach, Florida. This account
was opened on or around February 11, 1993. Mayfair Ventures was the general partner of
Grosvenor Partners. In addition to receiving avoidable transfers from BLMIS account 1ZB032,
Mayfair Ventures received subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS
31. Aster Associates (defined earlier as “Aster”) was, upon information and belief, a
general partnership formed under the laws of the State of Florida with its principal place of
business in Palm Beach, Florida. Aster held BLMIS account number 1ZB509 in the name of
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“Aster Associates, Frank Avellino, Nancy Carroll Avellino General Partners,” with the account
address reported in Palm Beach, Florida. This account was opened in or around June 23, 2004,
with a transfer of $5 million from BLMIS account 1ZB046 (Grosvenor Partners). In addition to
receiving avoidable transfers from BLMIS account 1ZB509, Aster received subsequent transfers
of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS accounts 1ZB046 (Grosvenor Partners), 1ZA879
32. St. James Associates (defined earlier as “St. James”) was, upon information and
belief, a general partnership formed under the laws of the State of Florida with its principal place
of business in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. St. James held BLMIS account number 1ZB510 in the
name of “St. James Associates, Michael Bienes, Diane [sic] Bienes General Partners,” with the
account address reported in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. This account was opened in or around
June 23, 2004, with a transfer of $5 million from BLMIS account 1ZB046 (Grosvenor Partners).
formed under the laws of the State of Florida with its principal place of business in Miami,
Florida. Strattham held BLMIS account number 1ZB262 in the name of “Strattham, C/O
Thomas G. Avellino,” with the account address reported in Miami, Florida. This account was
opened in or around August 15, 1995. In addition to receiving avoidable transfers from BLMIS
account 1ZB262, Strattham received subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least
34. Kenn Jordan Associates (defined earlier as “KJA”) was a general partnership
formed under the laws of the State of Florida with its principal place of business in Palm Beach,
Florida. From at least 1998, Avellino controlled and functioned as the principal of KJA. KJA
held BLMIS account number 1ZA879 in the name of “Kenn Jordan Associates, C/O Frank
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Avellino,” with the account address reported in Palm Beach, Florida. This account was opened
in or around February 10, 1993. In addition to receiving avoidable transfers from BLMIS
account 1ZA879, KJA received subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS
35. Ascent, Inc. (defined earlier as “Ascent”) was a corporation organized under the
laws of the State of Florida with its principal place of business in Miami, Florida. REDACTED
Avellino was the sole director and officer of Ascent. Ascent received subsequent transfers of
avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS accounts 1ZB262 (Strattham) and 1ZA879 (KJA).
was a corporation formed under the laws of the State of Florida with its principal place of
business in Palm Beach, Florida. Prior to changing its name to Mayfair Bookkeeping Services,
Inc., Mayfair Bookkeeping was known as Avellino & Bienes Accounting Services, Inc. (“A&B
Accounting Services”). Upon information and belief, Mayfair Bookkeeping was the sponsor for
the defunct Mayfair Pension Plan, a profit sharing plan originally known as the Avellino &
Bienes Profit Sharing Plan and Trust, which was established for the benefit of Avellino, Bienes,
Mrs. Avellino and Mrs. Bienes. Avellino and Bienes created, controlled and were officers and
directors of Mayfair Bookkeeping and its predecessor, A&B Accounting Services. Mayfair
Bookkeeping held BLMIS account number 1ZB249 in the name of “Mayfair Bookkeeping
Services Inc., Mayfair Pension Plan, C/O Frank Avellino,” with the account address reported in
Palm Beach, Florida. In addition, Mayfair Bookkeeping and its predecessor, A&B Accounting
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Services, received subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS accounts
38. Frank J. Avellino Revocable Trust Number One as amended and restated
January 26, 1990 (“FJA Revocable Trust Number One 1990”) was, upon information and
belief, a Trust with an address in Palm Beach, Florida that held a general partnership interest in
Mayfair Ventures. Avellino was the Trustee for FJA Revocable Trust Number One 1990.
REDACTED
39. Frank J. Avellino Grantor Retained Annuity Trust under Agreement dated
Under Agreement dated June 24, 1992 (“FJA GRAT Two 1992”) was, upon information and
17
belief, a Trust with an address in Palm Beach, Florida that held a general partnership interest in
Mayfair Ventures. Avellino was the Trustee for FJA GRAT Two 1992. REDACTED
41. Frank J. Avellino Revocable Trust Number One under Declaration of Trust
Number One dated June 10, 1988 (“FJA Revocable Trust Number One 1988”) was, upon
information and belief, a Trust with an address in Palm Beach, Florida that held a general
partnership interest in Mayfair Ventures. Avellino was the Trustee for FJA Revocable Trust
Number One 1988. Upon information and belief, FJA Revocable Trust Number One 1988
received subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS accounts 1ZB046
42. Nancy Carroll Avellino Revocable Trust under Trust Agreement dated May
18, 1992 (“Nancy Avellino GRAT 1992”) was, upon information and belief, a Trust with an
address in Palm Beach, Florida that held a general partnership interest in Mayfair Ventures. Mrs.
Avellino was the Trustee for Nancy Avellino GRAT 1992. Upon information and belief, Nancy
Avellino GRAT 1992 received subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS
43. Joseph Avellino (“Joseph Avellino”) resides in Long Valley, New Jersey, and is
Avellino’s son. Joseph Avellino is the guardian of two minors with the initials N.A. and St. A.
Upon
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information and belief, Joseph Avellino received subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers
from at least BLMIS accounts 1ZB046 (Grosvenor Partners), 1ZB509 (Aster) and 1ZA879
(KJA).
44. 27 Cliff, LLC (“27 Cliff”) was a limited liability company formed under the laws
of the State of Florida with its principal place of business in Palm Beach, Florida. The managers
45. Glenn and Sandra Dydo (individually, “Glenn Dydo” and “Sandra Dydo”)
reside in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Upon information and belief, Glenn Dydo is Mrs. Bienes’
brother and Sandra Dydo’s husband. Glenn Dydo and Sandra Dydo are the guardians of a minor
with the initials T. C. D. Upon information and belief, Glenn Dydo was a beneficiary of the
46. Glenn J. Dydo Irrevocable Trust U/A August 12, 1988 (“Glenn Dydo Trust”)
was, upon information and belief, a Trust with an address in Fort Lauderdale, Florida that held a
limited partnership interest in Grosvenor Partners. Upon information and belief, the Trustee for
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47. A minor with the initials T. C. D. (“T. C. D.”) resides in Fort Lauderdale,
Florida. Upon information and belief, T. C. D. is the nephew of Mrs. Bienes. Upon information
48. T. C. D. Trust (“T. C. D. Trust”) was, upon information and belief, a Trust with
an address in Fort Lauderdale, Florida that, upon information and belief, held a limited
49. Lorraine and Michael McEvoy (individually, “Lorraine McEvoy” and “Michael
McEvoy”) reside in Fairhaven, New Jersey. Lorraine McEvoy is Avellino’s daughter and
Michael McEvoy’s wife. Lorraine McEvoy and Michael McEvoy were limited partners of
received subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS accounts 1ZB046
50. The Avellino Family Foundation, Inc. (“AFF”) was a corporation organized
under the laws of the State of Florida with its principal place of business in Palm Beach, Florida.
The officers of AFF were Avellino, Joseph Avellino, Lorraine McEvoy, Mrs. Avellino, Thomas
subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS accounts 1ZB046 (Grosvenor
20
51. Rachel Rosenthal (“Rachel Rosenthal”), also known as Rachel Liersch, is
associated with an address in Palm Beach, Florida. Rachel Rosenthal is Mrs. Avellino’s
partner of Aster and an officer of AFF. Rachel Rosenthal received subsequent transfers of
avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS accounts 1ZB046 (Grosvenor Partners) and 1ZB509
(Aster). Upon information and belief, Rachel Rosenthal was also a beneficiary of the Rachel
Anne Rosenthal Trust U/A dated June 29, 1990 and the Rachel Rosenthal Trust #3 and was the
beneficiary of subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS accounts 1ZB046
52. The Rachel Anne Rosenthal Trust U/A dated June 29, 1990, also known as the
Rachel Anne Rosenthal Trust (“Rachel Rosenthal Trust”), was a Trust with an address in Palm
Beach, Florida. Upon information and belief, the Trustee for Rachel Rosenthal Trust was Mrs.
Avellino. Rachel Rosenthal Trust held a limited partnership interest in Grosvenor Partners,
REDACTED
53. The Rachel Rosenthal Trust #3, upon information and belief, also known as the
Rachel Rosenthal Trust #2 U/A dated June 24, 1992 (“Rachel Rosenthal Trust #3”), was a Trust
with an address in Palm Beach, Florida. Upon information and belief, the Trustee for Rachel
Rosenthal Trust #3 was Mrs. Avellino. Rachel Rosenthal Trust #3 held a limited partnership
interest in Grosvenor, a general partnership interest in Aster and received subsequent transfers of
(Aster).
21
54. Heather C. Lowles (“Heather Lowles”), upon information and belief, resides in
San Jose, California, and is Mrs. Avellino’s niece. Upon information and belief, Heather Lowles
was the beneficiary of the Heather Carroll Lowles Trust U/A dated June 29, 1990 and received
and was the beneficiary of subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS
accounts 1ZB046 (Grosvenor Partners) and 1ZB509 (Aster), and the trust.
55. Heather Carroll Lowles Trust U/A dated June 29, 1990, also known as the
Heather Lowles Trust (“Heather Lowles Trust”), was a Trust with an address in Palm Beach,
Florida. Upon information and belief the Trustees for Heather Lowles Trust were Avellino and
Mrs. Avellino. Upon information and belief, Heather Lowles Trust held a limited partnership
56. Tiffany J. Lowles (“Tiffany Lowles”), upon information and belief, resides in
Hendersonville, North Carolina, and is Mrs. Avellino’s niece. Upon information and belief,
Tiffany Lowles was the beneficiary of the Tiffany Joy Lowles Trust U/A dated June 29, 1990
and received and was the beneficiary of subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers from at least
BLMIS accounts 1ZB046 (Grosvenor Partners) and 1ZB509 (Aster), and the trust.
57. Tiffany Joy Lowles Trust U/A dated June 29, 1990, also known as the Tiffany
Lowles Trust (“Tiffany Lowles Trust”), was a Trust with an address in Palm Beach, Florida.
Upon information and belief, the Trustees for Tiffany Lowles Trust were Avellino and Mrs.
Avellino. Upon information and belief, Tiffany Lowles Trust held a limited partnership interest
22
REDACTED
58. Melanie A. Lowles (“Melanie Lowles”), also known as Melanie Flowers, upon
information and belief, resides in Wake Forest, North Carolina, and is Mrs. Avellino’s niece.
Upon information and belief, Melanie Lowles was the beneficiary of the Melanie Lowles Trust
and received and was the beneficiary of subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers made from at
least BLMIS accounts REDACTED and 1ZB509 (Aster), and the trust.
59. Melanie Ann Lowles Trust U/A dated June 29, 1990, also known as the
Melanie Lowles Trust (“Melanie Lowles Trust”), was a Trust with an address in Palm Beach,
Florida. Upon information and belief, the Trustees for Melanie Lowles Trust were Avellino and
Mrs. Avellino. Upon information and belief, Melanie Lowles Trust held a limited partnership
Lorraine McEvoy and Michael McEvoy’s daughter, and is Avellino and Mrs. Avellino’s
granddaughter. Upon information and belief, Taylor McEvoy was the beneficiary of the Taylor
61. Taylor Ashley McEvoy Trust U/A dated June 24, 1992, also known as the
Taylor McEvoy Trust (“Taylor McEvoy Trust”), was a Trust with an address in Palm Beach,
Florida. Upon information and belief, the Trustees for Taylor McEvoy Trust were Avellino and
23
Mrs. Avellino. The Taylor McEvoy Trust held a limited partnership interest in Grosvenor
Lorraine McEvoy and Michael McEvoy’s daughter, and is Avellino and Mrs. Avellino’s
granddaughter. Upon information and belief, Madison McEvoy was the beneficiary of the
Madison Alyssa McEvoy Trust U/A dated June 29, 1990 and received and was the beneficiary of
subsequent transfers of avoidable transfers made from at least BLMIS accounts REDACTED
REDACTED and 1ZB509 (Aster), and the trust.
63. Madison Alyssa McEvoy Trust U/A dated June 29, 1990, also known as the
Madison McEvoy Trust (“Madison McEvoy Trust”), was a Trust with an address in Palm Beach,
Florida. Upon information and belief, the Trustees for Madison McEvoy Trust were Avellino
and Mrs. Avellino. Madison McEvoy Trust held a limited partnership interest in Grosvenor
64. A minor with the initials S. A. (“S. A.”) resides in Holmdel, New Jersey, is
Thomas Avellino’s son, and Avellino and Mrs. Avellino’s grandson. Upon information and
belief, S. A. was the beneficiary of the S. A. Grantor Retained Annuity Trust REDACTED
65. S. A. Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (“S. A. GRAT”) was, upon information
and belief, a Trust with an address of Palm Beach, Florida that was also known as the S. A.
Trust. Upon information and belief, the Trustee for S. A. GRAT was Avellino. REDACTED
24
REDACTED
66. A minor with the initials N. A. (“N. A.”) resides in Long Valley, New Jersey, is
Joseph Avellino’s son, and Avellino and Mrs. Avellino’s grandson. Upon information and
belief, N. A. was the beneficiary of the N. A. Grantor Retained Annuity Trust REDACTED
67. N. A. Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (“N. A. GRAT”) was, upon information
and belief, a Trust with an address in Palm Beach, Florida that was also known as the N. A.
Trust. Upon information and belief, the Trustee for N. A. GRAT was Avellino.
REDACTED
68. A minor with the initials St. A. (“St. A.”) resides in Long Valley, New Jersey, is
Joseph Avellino’s son, and Avellino and Mrs. Avellino’s grandson. Upon information and
belief, St. A. was the beneficiary of the St. A. Grantor Retained Annuity Trust REDACTED
69. St. A. Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (“St. A. GRAT”) was a Trust with an
address in Palm Beach, Florida that was also known as the St. A. Trust. Upon information and
25
REDACTED
70. Optus Software, Inc. (“Optus”) was a corporation formed under the laws of the
State of New Jersey with its principal place of business in Somerset, New Jersey. Upon
information and belief, Optus was operated by Joseph Avellino and received subsequent
transfers of avoidable transfers from at least BLMIS account IZB046 (Grosvenor Partners).
71. Devon Paxson (“Devon Paxson”) resides in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.
72. Roslyck Paxson (“Roslyck Paxson”) resides in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.
73. On December 11, 2008 (the “Filing Date”),2 Madoff was arrested by federal
agents for violation of the criminal securities laws including, inter alia, securities fraud,
investment adviser fraud, and mail and wire fraud. Contemporaneously, the SEC filed a
complaint in the District Court which commenced the District Court Proceeding against Madoff
and BLMIS. The District Court Proceeding remains pending in the District Court. The SEC
complaint alleged that Madoff and BLMIS engaged in fraud through the investment adviser
activities of BLMIS.
2
Section 78lll(7)(B) of SIPA states that the filing date is “the date on which an application for a protective decree is
filed under 78eee(a)(3),” except where the debtor is the subject of a proceeding pending before a United States court
“in which a receiver, trustee, or liquidator for such debtor has been appointed and such proceeding was commenced
before the date on which such application was filed, the term ‘filing date’ means the date on which such proceeding
was commenced.” 15 U.S.C. § 78lll(7)(B). Thus, even though the application for a protective decree was filed on
December 15, 2008, the Filing Date in this action is December 11, 2008.
26
74. On December 12, 2008, The Honorable Louis L. Stanton of the District Court
entered an order appointing Lee S. Richards, Esq. as receiver for the assets of BLMIS.
75. On December 15, 2008, pursuant to section 78eee(a)(4)(A) of SIPA, the SEC
consented to a combination of its own action with an application of the Securities Investor
filed an application in the District Court alleging, inter alia, that BLMIS was not able to meet its
obligations to securities customers as they came due and, accordingly, its customers needed the
76. Also on December 15, 2008, Judge Stanton granted the SIPC application and
entered an order pursuant to SIPA (the “Protective Decree”), which, in pertinent part:
of SIPA.
By this Protective Decree, the Receiver was removed as Receiver for BLMIS.
77. By orders dated December 23, 2008 and February 4, 2009, respectively, the
Bankruptcy Court approved the Trustee’s bond and found that the Trustee was a disinterested
person. Accordingly, the Trustee is duly qualified to serve and act on behalf of the estate of
BLMIS.
78. At a plea hearing on March 12, 2009, in the case captioned United States v.
Madoff, Case No. 09-CR-213(DC), Madoff pleaded guilty to an 11-count criminal information
27
filed against him by the United States Attorneys’ Office for the Southern District of New York.
At the plea hearing, Madoff admitted that he “operated a Ponzi scheme through the investment
advisory side of [BLMIS].” See T’script of Plea Allocution of Bernard L. Madoff at 23, United
States v. Madoff, No. 09-CR-213 (DC) (S.D.N.Y. March 12, 2009) (Docket No. 50).
Additionally, Madoff asserted “[a]s I engaged in my fraud, I knew what I was doing [was]
wrong, indeed criminal.” Id. Madoff was sentenced on June 29, 2009 to 150 years in prison.
79. On August 11, 2009, a former BLMIS employee, Frank DiPascali (“DiPascali”),
pleaded guilty to participating and conspiring to perpetuate the Ponzi scheme. At a plea hearing
on August 11, 2009, in the case entitled United States v. DiPascali, Case No. 09-CR-764 (RJS),
DiPascali pleaded guilty to a ten-count criminal information. Among other things, DiPascali
admitted that the fraudulent scheme had begun at BLMIS since at least the 1980s. See T’script
of Plea Allocution of Frank DiPascali at 46, United States v. DiPascali, No. 09-CR-764 (RJS)
80. As the Trustee appointed under SIPA, the Trustee has the job of recovering and
paying out customer property to BLMIS’s customers, assessing claims, and liquidating any other
assets of the firm for the benefit of the estate and its creditors. The Trustee is in the process of
marshalling BLMIS’s assets, and the liquidation of BLMIS’s assets is well underway. However,
such assets will not be sufficient to reimburse the customers of BLMIS for the billions of dollars
that they invested with BLMIS over the years. Consequently, the Trustee must use his authority
under SIPA and the Bankruptcy Code to pursue recovery from customers who received
preferences and/or payouts of fictitious profits to the detriment of other defrauded customers
whose money was consumed by the Ponzi scheme. Absent this or other recovery actions, the
28
Trustee will be unable to satisfy the claims described in subparagraphs (A) through (D) of SIPA
section 78fff-2(c)(1).
81. Pursuant to section 78fff-1(a) of SIPA, the Trustee has the general powers of a
bankruptcy trustee in a case under the Bankruptcy Code in addition to the powers granted by
SIPA pursuant to section 78fff-1(b). Chapters 1, 3, 5, and subchapters I and II of chapter 7 of the
Bankruptcy Code are applicable to this case to the extent consistent with SIPA.
82. The Trustee has standing to bring these claims pursuant to section 78fff-1 of SIPA
and the Bankruptcy Code, including sections 323(b) and 704(a)(1), because, among other
reasons:
SIPA;
herein;
d. SIPC cannot by statute advance funds to the Trustee to fully reimburse all
bailors;
BLMIS who have filed claims in the liquidation proceeding (such claim-filing customers,
collectively, “Accountholders”). As of the date hereof, the Trustee has received multiple express
29
could have been asserted against the defendants and Subsequent Transferee Defendants (defined
below). As assignee, the Trustee stands in the shoes of persons who have suffered injury in fact
and a distinct and palpable loss for which the Trustee is entitled to reimbursement in the form of
monetary damages. The Trustee brings this action on behalf of, among others, those defrauded
customers of BLMIS who invested more money in BLMIS than they withdrew; and
BLMIS who have filed claims in the liquidation proceeding. SIPC has expressly conferred upon
the Trustee enforcement of its rights of subrogation with respect to payments it has made and is
83. Founded in 1959, BLMIS began operations as a sole proprietorship of Madoff and
later, effective January 2001, formed a New York limited liability company wholly owned by
Madoff. Since in or about 1987, BLMIS operated from its principal place of business at 885
Third Avenue, New York, New York. Madoff, as founder, chairman, and chief executive
officer, ran BLMIS together with several family members and a number of additional employees.
BLMIS was registered with the SEC as a securities broker-dealer under section 15(b) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. § 78o(b). By that registration, BLMIS is a member
of SIPC. BLMIS had three business units: investment advisory (the “IA Business”), market
84. Upon information and belief, from the inception of the fraud until 1998, BLMIS
also purported to use a convertible arbitrage investment strategy in many of its customers’
accounts, including the customer accounts of certain defendants named herein. This strategy
involved the purported purchase of convertible instruments, such as preferred securities, that
could be converted to shares of the corporation’s common stock, coupled with the short sale of
30
the corporation’s common stock, thereby locking in the gains in the transaction. After a
predetermined number of weeks, BLMIS purportedly converted the convertible instruments into
shares of common stock and used those shares to cover the short sale positions. These paired
transactions were entered at purported prices which yielded a predetermined profit and, as a
result, customers who were invested in this strategy often received identical rates of return in
nearly every purported paired “arbitrage” transaction. Each paired arbitrage transaction would
then be used across numerous accounts, without regard to the actual trading volume of the
gains or losses. For example, the strategy was executed by either purporting to purchase small
groups of securities transactions near lows and then purporting to sell those same securities near
highs, or by purporting to short-sell securities near highs and then purporting to repurchase those
86. For other accounts, Madoff described the IA Business’ investment strategy as a
“split-strike conversion” strategy. Madoff promised these clients that their funds would be
invested in a basket of common stocks within the S&P 100 Index, which is a collection of the
100 largest U.S. publicly traded companies. The basket of stocks would be intended to mimic
the movement of the S&P 100 Index. Madoff asserted that he would carefully time purchases
and sales to maximize value, but this meant that the clients’ funds would intermittently be out of
the market, at which times they would purportedly be invested in U.S. issued securities and
money market funds. The second part of the split-strike conversion strategy was the hedge of
such purchases with option contracts. Madoff purported to purchase and sell S&P 100 Index
31
option contracts that closely corresponded with the stocks in the basket, thereby controlling the
showing the securities that were held in – or had been traded through – their accounts, as well as
the growth of and profit from those accounts over time. Different purported trading strategies
would be reflected in different sub-accounts within the customers’ accounts. No matter which
purported trading strategy was used, however, the trades reported on these statements were a
complete fabrication. The security purchases and sales depicted in the account statements
virtually never occurred and the profits reported were entirely fictitious. At his plea hearing,
Madoff admitted that he never in fact purchased any of the securities he claimed to have
purchased for customer accounts. See Madoff Plea Allocution, at 25. Indeed, based on the
Trustee’s investigation to date and with the exception of isolated individual trades for certain
clients not named herein, there is no record of BLMIS having cleared any purchase or sale of
securities on behalf of the IA Business at the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation, the
clearing house for such transactions, or any other trading platform on which BLMIS could have
88. Prior to his arrest, Madoff assured clients and regulators that he conducted all
trades on the over-the-counter market after hours. To bolster that lie, Madoff periodically wired
(“MSIL”), a London based entity substantially owned by Madoff and his family. There are no
records that MSIL ever used the wired funds to purchase securities for the accounts of the IA
Business clients. In fact, MSIL wired hundreds of millions of dollars back into the bank
32
accounts of BLMIS’s proprietary trading and market making business in an attempt to create a
that BLMIS ever purchased or sold any of the options that Madoff claimed on customer
90. For all periods relevant hereto, the IA Business was operated as a Ponzi scheme
and Madoff and his co-conspirators concealed the ongoing fraud in an effort to hinder, delay, or
defraud other current and prospective customers of BLMIS from discovering the fraud. The
money received from investors was not set aside to buy securities as purported, but instead was
primarily used to make the distributions to – or payments on behalf of – other investors. The
money sent to BLMIS for investment, in short, was simply used to keep the operation going and
to enrich Madoff, his associates and others, including the defendants, until such time as the
requests for redemptions in December 2008 overwhelmed the flow of new investments and
regarding the underlying accounts and were an integral and essential part of the fraud. The
payments were necessary to validate the false account statements, to avoid detection of the fraud,
to retain existing investors, and to lure other investors into the Ponzi scheme.
92. During the scheme, certain investors requested and received distributions of the
“profits” listed for their accounts which were nothing more than fictitious profits. Other
investors, from time to time, redeemed or closed their accounts, or removed portions of the
purportedly available funds, and were paid consistently with the statements they had been
33
receiving. Some of those investors later reinvested part or all of those withdrawn payments with
BLMIS.
93. When payments were made to or on behalf of these investors, including the
defendants, the falsified monthly statements of accounts reported that the accounts of such
investors included substantial gains. In reality, BLMIS had not invested the investors’ principal
as reflected in customer statements. In an attempt to conceal the ongoing fraud and thereby
hinder, delay, or defraud other current and prospective investors, BLMIS paid to or on behalf of
certain investors, such as defendants, the inflated amounts reflected in the falsified financial
94. BLMIS used the funds deposited from new investments to continue operations
and pay redemption proceeds to or on behalf of other investors and to make other transfers. Due
to the siphoning and diversion of new investments to fund redemptions requested by other
investors, BLMIS did not have the funds to pay investors on account of their new investments.
BLMIS was able to stay afloat only by using the principal invested by some clients to pay other
95. In an effort to hinder, delay, or defraud authorities from detecting the fraud,
96. In or about January 2008, BLMIS filed with the SEC an Amended Uniform
Application for Investment Adviser Registration. The application represented, inter alia, that
BLMIS had 23 customer accounts and assets under management of approximately $17.1 billion.
In fact, in January 2008, BLMIS had approximately 4,900 active client accounts with a purported
34
97. Not only did Madoff seek to evade regulators, Madoff also had false audit reports
“prepared” by Friehling & Horowitz, a three-person accounting firm in Rockland County, New
York. Of the two accountants at the firm, one was semi-retired and living in Florida for many
98. At all times relevant hereto, the liabilities of BLMIS were billions of dollars
greater than the assets of BLMIS. At all relevant times, BLMIS was insolvent in that: (i) its
assets were worth less than the value of its liabilities, (ii) it could not meet its obligations as they
came due, and (iii) at the time of the transfers, BLMIS was left with insufficient capital.
99. Avellino and Bienes provided the investment capital to enable the Ponzi scheme
to grow, lied to the regulators to conceal the fraudulent trading activity in their IA accounts, and
continued to receive fraudulent side payments and disguised fees comprised of stolen customer
money from BLMIS. Much of this occurred after they were decisively sanctioned by the SEC in
1993 and on clear notice that BLMIS was fabricating trading activity that had never occurred and
100. In or about 1960, Madoff began operating a brokerage firm named “Bernard L.
Madoff” from the offices of his father-in-law Saul Alpern’s (“Alpern”) accounting firm, Alpern
& Heller, where Avellino worked as an accountant. Upon information and belief, in order to
assist his son-in-law’s business, Alpern encouraged people to entrust funds with Madoff for
purported investment. In or about 1961, Madoff moved his brokerage business out of Alpern &
Heller, but Alpern continued to encourage people to entrust funds with Madoff.
101. Upon information and belief, in the 1960s, in addition to operating an accounting
business, Alpern & Avellino began operating the first feeder fund to provide capital to Madoff
35
for purported discretionary investment in securities. Alpern & Avellino operated the feeder fund
to pool money from their customers for investment with BLMIS to profit from the investment of
other people’s money as well as their own. This feeder fund initially operated under the name of
their firm, Alpern & Avellino. In the early 1970s, Bienes became a partner in the accounting
firm. Upon the retirement of Alpern in or around 1974, the accounting firm was renamed
Avellino & Bienes, and Avellino and Bienes operated the firm and the Madoff feeder fund as
partners.
102. For decades, Avellino, and later Avellino and Bienes, utilized A&B to raise
hundreds of millions of dollars of funds for investment with BLMIS, while retaining tens of
millions of dollars as profits for pooling and investing other people’s money with Madoff’s
Ponzi scheme. To attract new investors, A&B collected money from individuals and entities by
promising a guaranteed rate of return that generally ranged from approximately 13%–18% of the
original investment. In an attempt to avoid scrutiny from securities regulators, A&B termed
these investments “loans” and issued letters to investors that specified the rate of return for each
purported loan.
103. As the operators of one of Madoff’s first and oldest source of funds for his Ponzi
scheme, Avellino and Bienes enjoyed special access and privileges not available to other
investors in BLMIS. To keep the money flowing and the Ponzi scheme operating, Madoff
guaranteed significant returns to Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Bienes, and A&B. In turn, A&B
retained the difference between the returns promised by Madoff and the returns they had
guaranteed to their underlying investors. For example, there were certain periods where Madoff
promised A&B annual returns of 20%. A&B would thereafter promise 18% or less to its
underlying investors, retaining the difference as profits to enrich themselves at the expense of
36
their investors. By 1984, the profits from the A&B feeder fund had far eclipsed any revenue
from its accounting practice, which ceased operating at that time so Avellino and Bienes could
focus exclusively on profiting from the recruitment of funds for investment with BLMIS.
104. A&B investor money included, among other investors, money pooled together by
entities known as Telfran Associates, Ltd., Merlin Associates and Enhancement Group. Telfran
Associates was owned and controlled by Stephen Mendelow, Edward Glantz, and Joel Levey,
while Merlin Associates and Enhancement Group was owned and controlled by Richard Glantz
(collectively, the “A&B Business Associates”). The sole purpose of these entities was to pool
investor money for investment with A&B and ultimately with Madoff.
105. The A&B Business Associates were friends of Avellino and Bienes. Upon
information and belief, Avellino and Bienes encouraged them to collect money for pooled
investments in A&B. A&B paid the A&B Business Associates a guaranteed rate of return
slightly less than it was receiving from its BLMIS IA accounts. The A&B Business Associates
utilized the same model Avellino and Bienes followed and provided a slightly lower return to
their individual investors in order to retain the difference as profits for themselves.
106. A&B and its predecessors operated as a significant feeder fund for BLMIS
uninterrupted from the early 1960s until 1992, when the SEC commenced an investigation of
A&B, Avellino, Bienes, and the A&B Business Associates, which ultimately led to A&B’s
liquidation.
107. At the time of the SEC’s investigation of A&B in 1992, records reflect that A&B
had obtained hundreds of millions of dollars from at least a thousand individuals and entities
throughout the United States and deposited those funds with BLMIS. A&B’s records reflect that
as of June 18, 1992, it owed these individuals and entities more than $399 million dollars.
37
108. Prior to the liquidation of A&B, Avellino, Bienes and Mrs. Bienes also utilized
personal IA accounts to profit from investments in the BLMIS fraudulent scheme, separate and
apart from the A&B IA accounts that received A&B investor funds. For example, Bienes and his
wife utilized IA account number 1B0018 in the name of Mrs. Bienes to extract fictitious profits
from BLMIS. Avellino similarly used the following personal IA accounts to withdraw millions
of dollars of fictitious profits: (i) “Avelinno [sic] Family Trust C/O Avellino & Bienes” (account
number 100126), (ii) “Avelinno [sic] Group C/O Frank Avellino” (account number 100127), and
109. In addition, Avellino, Bienes, and Mrs. Bienes each benefited from A&B account
number 1A0046, which was established as a purported A&B pension plan account that withdrew
110. On or before June 1992, the SEC commenced an inquiry into whether A&B,
Avellino, Bienes and the A&B Business Associates were unlawfully selling unregistered
securities to the public and acting as an unregistered investment adviser in connection with
hundreds of millions of dollars they had received from more than a thousand investors
throughout the United States. This investigation concerned the funds that were ultimately
111. At the time, A&B maintained IA accounts with BLMIS with the following
account numbers: 1A0045, 1A0046, 1A0047, 1A0048, 1A0049, and 1A0050 (the “Existing
A&B IA Accounts”).3 A&B used these accounts to invest money it had collected and pooled
from investors. In addition, A&B used an account or accounts at Chemical Bank (the “Chemical
3
As reference above, account number 1A0046 was in the name of A&B Pension Plan.
38
Bank Account”) to facilitate the pooling of funds for investment in the Existing A&B IA
Accounts and to make payments to underlying investors who requested withdrawals. A&B
investor money was exclusively invested in these Existing A&B IA Accounts at BLMIS. A&B
account number 1A0053 (the “Phony A&B IA Account”), did not exist until after its fraudulent
creation by BLMIS on or after June 23, 1992, as described in greater detail below. At all
relevant times, Avellino and Bienes closely monitored and controlled the Existing A&B IA
Accounts, the Chemical Bank Account, and the deposits and withdrawals made therefrom.
112. Avellino and Bienes provided the SEC with a list representing that as of June 18,
1992, A&B owed its investors $399,819,455, all of which they claimed was invested with
BLMIS. As of June 30, 1992, however, BLMIS’s records and account statements reflected a
total equity balance of approximately $364 million purportedly held by BLMIS on behalf of
A&B in the Existing A&B IA Accounts. The collective total amount reflected in the Existing
A&B IA Accounts was approximately $35.8 million less than Avellino and Bienes had
represented to the SEC they owed to their underlying investors just two weeks earlier.
113. Avellino and Bienes jointly testified under oath before the SEC on July 7, 1992.
At the time of their testimony before the SEC, Avellino and Bienes knew or should have known
from the customer account statements provided to them by BLMIS that the Existing A&B IA
million less than what A&B records showed was owed to A&B underlying investors.
114. Avellino and Bienes also knew or should have known that cash held in the
Chemical Bank Account was inadequate in itself to close this shortfall. Avellino and Bienes
testified that A&B utilized the Chemical Bank Account to handle A&B investor funds and that
this account typically maintained an average balance of $2 million to $3 million and never
39
maintained a balance of more than $6 million. See T’script of SEC Testimony, Avellino and
Bienes, dated July 7, 1992, at 50–52 (hereinafter “SEC Tr.”). Accordingly, even assuming the
Chemical Bank Account had a maximum balance of $6 million as of the date Avellino and
Bienes testified before the SEC, they knew or should have known that there was at least an
approximate $29.8 ($35.8 – $6) million shortfall between what A&B owed to investors and the
115. Upon information and belief, this approximate shortfall of at least $29.8 million
existed because Avellino and Bienes converted A&B investor funds to their own benefit or were
116. The existence of this shortfall was inconsistent with false assurances Avellino
[W]e examine [the account statements] and do our due diligence on a monthly
basis, we look at our fair market value of all of these securities that are being held
at Bernard L. Madoff on behalf of Avellino & Bienes. We determine the fair
market value at the end of each month and we make sure, and this is where we are
very positive, we make sure that the value is always in excess of the loans
payable.
117. Avellino further testified that “[i]f you look at the $400 million that we owe to
lenders and you looked at my portfolio and, by the way, all of the $400 million plus is with
Bernard L. Madoff, every single dollar, it is invested in long-term Fortune 500 securities, it is, to
use the word ‘protected’ with hedges of Standard & Poor’s index. . . . And I can honestly say
over and over again that we always have a cushion or, by experience, have always had a cushion
118. Bienes also testified to the SEC that the money invested with Madoff was
protected by a 20% “cushion” and that the total amount invested with BLMIS was therefore
40
valued at approximately $440 million. This amount consisted of purported gains made on the
amounts invested on behalf of A&B and personal funds Avellino and Bienes had invested with
Madoff:
We owe, say, 400 million. The value of our investment with the broker [Madoff]
is 440-some-odd million. We always have approximately 20 percent more with
the broker than what we owe, it could be even bigger than that.
119. When confronted with the obvious fact that $40 million was not a 20% cushion
Well no. I’ll tell you why. A lot of it is in Treasuries right now. It’s not in the
market. That’s why we have the – about close to 100 million is in Treasuries, so
even with any loss, we would still have approximately 20 percent above and
beyond what we owe, which is part of our capital. We usually always will be
covered by 20 percent more than what we owe lenders. In addition to that we
have our own personal funds which are also invested in the same type of
discretionary account with the same broker.
120. Avellino and Bienes carefully reviewed their account statements. At the time of
their SEC testimony, they knew or should have known that the aggregate balance in the Existing
A&B IA Accounts did not correspond to the amount of money A&B owed to its investors.
Avellino and Bienes also knew or should have known that the account statements for the
Existing A&B IA Accounts at BLMIS did not reflect the extra $40 million cushion they claimed
121. Avellino and Bienes felt confident making the above misrepresentations under
oath because they knew in late June 1992, just prior to their testimony, BLMIS had created the
Phony A&B IA Account. The sole purpose for creating this account was to mislead the
regulators and create the appearance that A&B accounts at BLMIS held securities and cash
positions sufficient to cover the amounts owed to A&B investors and to reflect a cushion.
41
Avellino and Bienes knew that if the SEC learned of the shortfall in their BLMIS accounts the
fraud would be revealed. Madoff shared a similar interest in avoiding regulatory scrutiny and the
exposure of his fraud. With the knowledge of Avellino and Bienes, Madoff directed his
employees to manufacture and record fictitious holdings in the newly created Phony A&B IA
Account. The creation of the Phony A&B IA Account increased the purported total equity
balance of the A&B customer accounts to a value sufficient to conceal the $29.8 million
shortfall.
122. In and after late June 1992, at Madoff’s direction, BLMIS employees scrambled
to create the Phony A&B IA Account with a large enough equity balance to cover the shortfall in
the Existing A&B IA Accounts and to provide a purported cushion. BLMIS generated fictitious
and backdated customer account statements for the Phony A&B IA Account going back to at
least November 1989. BLMIS filled these fraudulent account statements with dozens of
fictitious transactions designed to show realized and unrealized gains from securities and options
transactions totaling approximately $65.9 million, the amount necessary to hide the shortfall and
provide a cushion.
123. For example, some of the backdated statements for the Phony A&B IA Account
a. the backdated January 1991 statement reflects the purchase of 5,950 “S&P
100 Index – April 335 Call” contracts which were thereafter reported on the April 1991
12, 1991 of 3,500 “S&P 100 Index – January 355 Call” contracts and 3,000 “S&P 100 Index –
42
January 360 Call” contracts. The January 1992 statement reflected the purported sale of these
same call contracts for approximate gains of $10,480,750 and $8,458,500 respectively; and
550,000 shares of Ford stock, all on margin for approximately $13,181,250. On June 30, 1992,
the 550,000 shares had a fair market value of $25,231,250 translating into an unrealized gain of
$12,050,000.
124. Significantly, a version of the June 30, 1992 account statement recovered from
BLMIS reflects that each of the transactions described above were entered into the BLMIS
systems that generated these phony statements on or around June 23, 1992, long after the dates
125. Other forensic evidence and documents recovered from BLMIS corroborate the
fact that unlike the Existing A&B IA Accounts which had been in existence for several years, the
Phony A&B IA Account was created on or after June 23, 1992, no more than two weeks prior to
126. Avellino and Bienes knew that they had neither opened, nor contributed a dime of
A&B investor money to fund the Phony A&B IA Account prior to June 1992. Because the
Phony A&B IA Account was not created until June 1992, Avellino and Bienes did not and could
not have received contemporaneous monthly statements for the account from November 1989
127. When they eventually received the backdated customer account statements for the
Phony A&B IA Account from BLMIS, Avellino and Bienes knew or should have known that
BLMIS had fraudulently created the statements to reflect transactions which never occurred and
an account balance that did not exist. Avellino and Bienes, confronted with backdated account
43
statements reflecting more than a $65.9 million equity balance that appeared out of thin air knew
or should have known that Madoff and BLMIS were acting fraudulently and falsifying securities
transactions. Instead of alerting regulators and their investors, Avellino and Bienes testified
falsely to the SEC so they could continue to profit from Madoff’s fraud.
128. Notwithstanding their knowledge that the customer account statements for the
Phony A&B IA Account were fabricated, upon information and belief, Avellino and Bienes
produced the backdated account statements to the court appointed receiver assigned to liquidate
A&B (the “Receiver”) as if they were legitimate so that Madoff’s fraud and the shortfall in the
129. To avoid further scrutiny from government regulators, Avellino and Bienes went
along with Madoff’s subterfuge so that they could conceal the shortfall and continue to profit
130. Upon information and belief, as the SEC investigation of A&B, Avellino and
Bienes progressed, Madoff became concerned about what might happen if BLMIS or A&B were
compelled to produce the historical account statements for the Existing A&B IA Accounts to the
SEC. Because of this concern, BLMIS began an additional effort in or about June 1992 to alter
certain previously issued account statements for the Existing A&B IA Accounts to eliminate
131. For example, BLMIS altered the December 1989 account statement for A&B
account number 1-00125-3 (which later became account 1A0045) to eliminate an entry in the
customer account statement that reflected a December 14, 1989 transfer of $145,318.34 from an
IA account held in the name of “Alpern & Avellino,” with account number 1-00124-1. To
44
conceal the alterations, BLMIS also altered the November 1989 account statement for A&B
account number 1-00125-3 to add an entry that indicated the account had received a dividend
payment from General Motors in the amount of $145,318.34, the exact amount that had been
removed from the December 1989 statement. BLMIS performed additional alterations of
numerous other account statements for this account and account number 1-00125-7.
132. Avellino and Bienes, who claimed in SEC testimony to have diligently reviewed
A&B account statements, received and reviewed the original account statement for A&B account
number 1-00125-3 for November and December 1989. BLMIS could not alter A&B account
statements for production to the SEC by either BLMIS or A&B without notifying Avellino and
Bienes of the alterations and providing them with a copy to ensure that there would be no
133. Having received these fraudulently altered account statements from BLMIS,
Avellino and Bienes also knew or should have known that BLMIS was placing fictitious
transactions on account statements to obstruct the SEC investigation. When Avellino and Bienes
learned that BLMIS was fraudulently altering prior account statements before they were
produced to a regulator and/or the Receiver, they knew or should have known that BLMIS and
BLMIS, Avellino and Bienes made after-the-fact efforts to “paper” the files for the A&B
accounts. Despite having accounts for many years at BLMIS, on or about July 17, 1992, after
Avellino and Bienes testified to the SEC, a BLMIS employee faxed blank partnership account
and other account opening documents to Avellino for signature. On the same day, BLMIS
45
similarly provided Bienes and Mrs. Bienes with blank account forms for signature. Avellino,
Bienes, and Mrs. Bienes thereafter each signed the forms in blank, and sent them back to BLMIS
so that it would appear that the proper account documentation existed for the accounts in the
SEC OBTAINS AN
INJUNCTION AGAINST AVELLINO, BIENES, AND A&B
135. On November 17, 1992, the SEC filed a Complaint for Preliminary and
Permanent Injunctive and Other Equitable Relief against A&B, Avellino and Bienes alleging that
from 1962 until at least July 1992, Avellino and Bienes had unlawfully operated A&B as an
unregistered investment company and engaged in the unlawful sale of unregistered securities.
136. On November 18, 1992, the District Court entered a Preliminary Injunction and
appointed a receiver to oversee the liquidation of A&B. The Preliminary Injunction ordered that
Avellino, Bienes and A&B not commit any additional violations of the securities laws and
required the receiver to perform a liquidation of A&B in which all owed funds would be returned
to A&B investors by November 24, 1992. Upon information and belief, employees at BLMIS
scrambled to secure sufficient funds to meet the court ordered redemption. In order to provide
funds for this purpose, in or about November 1992, Madoff obtained securities and cash from at
least two other IA customers and used those securities as collateral for loans. Some of the loan
proceeds were transferred to BLMIS bank accounts and were used to pay off a portion of the
approximately $329 million were made to A&B investors. Almost a quarter of a billion of
dollars of these proceeds appear on BLMIS account statements to have been withdrawn from the
46
Phony A&B IA Account. This distribution was in addition to the distribution of funds totaling
138. On September 7, 1993, the U.S. District Court issued a Final Judgment of
Permanent Injunction and Other Equitable Relief By Consent Against A&B, Avellino and
Bienes ordering, among other things, that they be enjoined from violating section 5(a) and (c) of
the Securities Act of 1933, 15 U.S.C. §§ 77e(a) and (c), by selling unregistered securities and
AVELLINO AND BIENES ATTEMPT TO FIND “FRONT MEN” AND USE NEW
PARTNERSHIPS TO CONTINUE TO FUNNEL MONEY TO BLMIS
139. Avellino and Bienes did not let the restrictions of the preliminary and permanent
injunctions or the ongoing litigation with the SEC get in the way of their insatiable thirst for
140. In or about late 1992 or early 1993, despite the requirements of the Preliminary
Injunction, the ongoing litigation with the SEC and their clear knowledge that their prior
investment activities were prohibited, Avellino and Bienes attempted to find people willing to act
as “front men” to operate partnerships so that they could continue to raise and pool money from
others to invest with BLMIS but avoid the scrutiny of the regulators. Specifically, Avellino and
Bienes met with certain individuals and requested that they operate such investment partnerships
for the benefit of Avellino and Bienes. When these individuals refused to act as “front men,”
Avellino and Bienes instead negotiated an arrangement whereby, in return for referring people to
invest in their entities, S&P and P&S, for ultimate investment with BLMIS, the partnerships
would pay Avellino and Bienes annual fees in the amount of 10% of the annual returns received
47
141. The arrangement Avellino and Bienes made with S&P and P&S allowed them to
continue to profit significantly from referring investors, now indirectly, to BLMIS. For example,
upon information and belief, P&S and S&P paid management fees of approximately $112,500
for the benefit of Avellino and Bienes for the years 2000–2002. In addition, upon information
and belief, for the years 2003–2007, P&S and S&P paid management fees totaling approximately
$599,190. A portion of the fees allocated to Avellino were paid to another individual or entity at
Avellino’s direction.
142. In February 1993, a little more than two months after the issuance of the
Preliminary Injunction against them and during ongoing litigation with the SEC, Avellino,
Bienes, and their wives remained undeterred and created Grosvenor Partners. Grosvenor
Partners opened an IA account at BLMIS, which was used by Avellino, Bienes and their wives to
funnel their money and money collected from friends and family so they could continue to profit
from the Ponzi scheme and the investment of other peoples’ money.
143. Avellino and Bienes were also the equitable and beneficial owners of other
entities that received fees for ostensibly “managing” or providing “services” to Grosvenor
Partners, and thereby continued to extract substantial profits from Madoff’s Ponzi scheme. For
example, a Mayfair Ventures tax return reflects that in 1996 Grosvenor Partners paid a
“management fee” of $776,188 to Mayfair Ventures, an entity owned by Avellino, Bienes and
Bookkeeping, was also an entity owned and controlled by Avellino and Bienes and created for
48
144. In addition to these so-called “management fees” and the principal invested in this
account, Grosvenor Partners withdrew $58.2 million more from BLMIS than it invested over the
life of its IA account. Millions of dollars of these withdrawals were to or for the benefit of
Avellino, Bienes, their wives, and the entities they owned and controlled.
145. In February 1993, also only months after the Preliminary Injunction, Avellino and
Bienes established an IA account at BLMIS in the name of Mayfair Ventures, so they could
continue to profit from Madoff’s Ponzi scheme. During the lifetime of the Mayfair Ventures
account, Mayfair Ventures withdrew in excess of $4.3 million more than it had invested, all for
146. On or about January 27, 1995, Avellino and Bienes established yet another IA
account at BLMIS so they could profit from Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, this time in the name of
Mayfair Bookkeeping, for the Mayfair Pension Plan. This account was utilized to receive a
147. In or about February 1993, just after the issuance of the Preliminary Injunction,
Kenneth Jordan, a close friend of Avellino and also a former A&B investor, established an IA
account at BLMIS in the name of KJA. The KJA IA account was utilized to invest funds with
BLMIS that had been pooled from numerous investors, who were given limited partnership
interests in KJA. In or about January 1998, Avellino became a general partner of KJA and took
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148. REDACTED
149. In or about June 2004, Bienes and Mrs. Bienes established an IA account at
BLMIS in the name of St. James so they could continue to profit from Madoff’s Ponzi scheme.
The St. James account was primarily funded with $45.8 million in transfers from the Grosvenor
Partners BLMIS account in which Bienes and Mrs. Bienes were investors. During the lifetime of
the St. James IA account, St. James withdrew in excess of $17.4 million more than it invested
with BLMIS. Upon information and belief, all of the withdrawals were for the benefit of
150. In or about June 2004, Avellino and Mrs. Avellino established an IA account at
BLMIS in the name of Aster so they could continue to profit from Madoff’s Ponzi scheme
REDACTED
Partners BLMIS account to fund Aster’s account was more than $21.4 million. During the
lifetime of the Aster BLMIS account, Aster withdrew at least $7 million more than it invested
with BLMIS.
151. Upon information and belief, Avellino and Bienes opened BLMIS accounts in the
names of Grosvenor Partners, Mayfair Ventures, St. James, and Aster rather than in their own
names in an attempt to avoid further scrutiny by securities regulators and in an attempt to conceal
their involvement with entities that continued to pool money for investment in BLMIS
50
MADOFF AGREES TO PAY AVELLINO AND
BIENES GUARANTEED RATES OF RETURN AND FRAUDULENT SIDE
PAYMENTS FOR FUNDS FORMER A&B INVESTORS REINVESTED WITH BLMIS
152. Upon information and belief, in or about 1992 and 1993, Madoff desperately
wanted former A&B investors to reinvest the funds they received from the forced liquidation of
A&B. In addition, Madoff did not want Avellino and Bienes to reveal to regulators what they
knew regarding the backdated statements, alteration of previously issued statements or the
creation of the Phony A&B IA Account. Upon information and belief, to encourage former
A&B investors to invest with BLMIS directly, Avellino, Bienes, and certain A&B Business
Associates demanded from Madoff that new IA accounts under their control receive guaranteed
annual rates of return of 17%. Avellino, Bienes and the A&B Business Associates also
requested that they receive fraudulent side payments based on a percentage of the amount that
former A&B investors reinvested directly with BLMIS after A&B’s liquidation. Desperate to
keep the Ponzi scheme afloat and avoid its collapse, Madoff agreed to these demands.
153. Specifically, Madoff, Avellino, and Bienes agreed that the fraudulent side
payments would be based on the amount A&B investors reinvested with BLMIS by March 31,
1993 (approximately $372 million), decreased by the $36 million invested by Grosvenor Partners
and Mayfair Ventures. Pursuant to their agreement, BLMIS would pay Avellino and Bienes an
annual payment equal to 2% of $336 million minus the amount of fraudulent side payments that
was also to be paid to the A&B Business Associates. The A&B Business Associates received
the fraudulent side payments to compensate them for $72 million that had been reinvested by
their former customers, which was included in the original $372 million that was reinvested
154. Although Madoff, Avellino, and Bienes agreed that fraudulent side payments
would include the year 1993, upon information and belief, the payments did not begin until 1994,
51
and the agreed upon amounts were not always timely paid on an annual basis. As set forth
below, the payments were often based upon rounded numbers instead of exact calculations. As a
result, BLMIS frequently made “after the fact” payments in later years to correct underpayments
from earlier years. There were other adjustments to the fraudulent side payment calculation
made during those later years. For example, upon information and belief, for the years 1993
through 1997, the calculated amounts of the fraudulent side payments were adjusted downward
for instances where Avellino and Bienes-controlled IA accounts received purported rates of
return from fictitious trading activity in excess of the promised 17%. Similarly, in years when
Avellino and Bienes-controlled IA accounts fell short of the agreed upon guaranteed rate of
return during the months of January through November, BLMIS employees increased the
fraudulent side payments generally in December to make up the difference and deliver the
promised returns.
155. In 2000, BLMIS slightly altered the manner of calculating the fraudulent side
payments to the Avellino and Bienes-controlled accounts. BLMIS began using a base figure of
$264 million, which did not include the $72 million that had been reinvested by former
customers of the A&B Business Associates. This allowed BLMIS to avoid making any
additional adjustments for the fraudulent side payments made to the A&B Business Associates.
156. Upon information and belief, as the pressure to make redemptions increased
during the last few years of the Ponzi scheme, Madoff unilaterally made periodic reductions to
the multiplier used to calculate the fraudulent side payments and also to the guaranteed rate of
52
Year Multiplier Guaranteed Rate of Return
1993–2001 2% 17%
2002 1% 14%
2003 1% 11%
2004–2007 .5% 11%
157. BLMIS did not pay the annual fraudulent side payments to Avellino, Bienes and
their wives by conventional means such as checks or credits to their accounts. Rather, BLMIS
provided the fraudulent side payments by crediting IA accounts controlled and/or owned by
Avellino, Bienes, and their wives with blatantly fictitious and highly profitable, non-hedged
options transactions. None of these options trades were ever executed by BLMIS. In total,
BLMIS recorded these fictitious options trades to provide Avellino and Bienes with at least $59
million of fictitious gains that were immediately available for withdrawal from their IA accounts.
In reality, these fictitious gains, when withdrawn, were nothing more than customer property
158. Avellino closely monitored the IA accounts for which he, Bienes, their wives and
families were equitable and/or beneficial owners and directed Madoff and others at BLMIS to
place the fictitious options transactions in certain accounts on an annual basis. As set forth
below, BLMIS recorded those fictitious, non-hedged options transactions in the following
accounts controlled by Avellino, Bienes (or Thomas Avellino in the case of Strattham), and/or
their wives:
53
Mayfair Grosvenor Mayfair St.
Year Ventures Partners Bookkeeping Aster James Strattham KJA Total
1993 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1994 $2,297,700 $1,357,575 0 0 0 0 0 $3,655,275
1995 $486,500 $164,400 0 0 0 0 0 $650,900
1996 0 $5,577,228 0 0 0 0 0 $5,577,228
1997 $428,670 $1,948,500 $2,922,750 0 0 0 0 $5,299,920
1998 $500,220 $6,272,600 $1,198,940 0 0 0 0 $7,971,760
1999 $1,005,875 $2,011,750 $2,518,120 0 0 0 0 $5,535,745
2000 $5,372,000 $1,074,400 $537,200 0 0 0 0 $6,983,600
2001 $8,172,800 0 0 0 0 0 0 $8,172,800
2002 $2,164,320 $1,743,480 0 0 0 0 0 $3,907,800
2003 $3,202,760 0 0 0 0 0 0 $3,202,760
2004 $1,785,810 $66,516 $270,402 $41,934 $41,934 $26,028 $20,244 $2,252,868
2005 $108,640 $2,266,242 $146,664 $353,080 $282,464 $179,256 $57,036 $3,393,382
2006 $1,679,230 0 0 0 0 0 0 $1,679,230
2007 $1,685,480 0 0 0 0 0 0 $1,685,480
Total $28,890,005 $22,482,691 $7,594,076 $395,014 $324,398 $205,284 $77,280 $59,968,748
159. Payment of the fraudulent side payments in the manner described above should
have been an obvious red flag to Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes, Thomas
Avellino, Grosvenor Partners, Strattham, Mayfair Ventures, Mayfair Bookkeeping, Aster, St.
James, and KJA – yet another indication to them that Madoff was operating a fraud.
160. Similarly, Avellino, Bienes, their wives, Thomas Avellino, Grosvenor Partners,
Strattham, Mayfair Ventures, Aster, St. James, and KJA knew or should have known that it was
not possible for Madoff to guarantee and consistently deliver a predetermined rate of return.
These defendants also knew or should have known that the clearly fictitious options trades
reported in their accounts to meet promised gains could not be the result of legitimate trading
activity. These defendants had been on notice of fraud at BLMIS for years, and nevertheless
continued to direct desired profits and payments for their benefit and to ignore the clear evidence
of fraudulent conduct.
161. Because Madoff promised guaranteed rates of return and made fraudulent side
54
process to identify, track and reconcile accounts whose performance did not meet the guaranteed
rate of return or who were due to be paid the fraudulent side payments. This process relied upon
handwritten reconciliations to determine the amount of non-hedged options trades that would
need to appear on account statements to compensate these investors, including Avellino, Bienes,
162. The process for determining the amounts owed to these customers was referred to
internally at BLMIS as calculating either the “Shupt,” “Schupt,” or “Bingo” number (hereinafter,
“Schupt”). Upon information and belief, the term Schupt was intended to be the word “Schtup,”
a derogatory Yiddish term. Payments made pursuant to this process were referred to internally at
163. Once the amount owed to a particular specially favored customer was determined,
the money was paid to specific IA accounts through the fictitious purchase and sale of options
transactions engineered to deliver the predetermined dollar amount needed to pay the guaranteed
164. In addition to calculating the amount owed, the handwritten Schupt schedules also
indicated the type and amount of options contracts that would be “executed” to make up the total
payment. These numbers were arrived at with the benefit of hindsight by selecting specifically
priced historical option contracts that would create a particular gain and dividing that gain by the
dollar amount owed to each account to determine the number of contracts to be purchased in
each account. An account statement was then generated to reflect the purported transactions and
the proceeds generated therefrom. The balance within these accounts was then available for
55
165. The Schupt schedules and non-hedged options transactions reflected on the
December 2002 account statements for BLMIS accounts in the names of Mayfair Ventures and
BLMIS employees contained entries for IA accounts held by Mayfair Ventures and Grosvenor
Partners indicating that these accounts were owed a total of $2.6 million for the fraudulent side
payments and $1,296,000 in fictitious gains to meet the guaranteed rate of return of 14% then in
effect. Of the $1,296,000 of fictitious gains owed, $1,231,000 was owed to the Grosvenor
Partners account to bring that account’s return to 14%. Specifically, the Schupt schedule
indicated “Brings to 14[%] 1231” for Grosvenor Partners per the “WHY” column on the
schedule.
167. Upon information and belief, Avellino, with the knowledge of Bienes, directed
that the Grosvenor Partners account be allocated $500,000 of the $2.6 million fraudulent side
payment for a total Schupt payment of $1,731,000 ($1,231,000 in additional return plus
$500,000 for the fraudulent side payment). The Mayfair Ventures account was owed $65,000 to
bring the account’s performance to 14% and was allocated, upon information and belief, at the
direction of Avellino, with the knowledge of Bienes, $2.1 million, which represented the
remaining portion of the fraudulent side payment for a total payment of $2,165,000.
168. The December 2002 account statement for the Grosvenor Partners IA account
reflects the purchase and sale of 870 “S&P 100 Index – December 465 Put” and 1,740 “S&P 100
Index – December 460 Put” option contracts generating $1,743,480 in gains, slightly more than
what the Schupt schedule indicated was owed for the fraudulent side payment and guaranteed
return to this account. Likewise, the December 2002 account statement for the Mayfair Ventures
56
IA account reflects the purchase and sale of 1,080 “S&P 100 Index – December 465 Put” and
2,160 “S&P 100 Index – December 460 Put” option contracts. As intended, these transactions
generated $2,164,320 in proceeds, slightly less than what the Schupt schedule indicated was
169. The Aster and St. James IA accounts were also recipients of blatantly fictitious
options transactions engineered to deliver the predetermined dollar amount needed to pay the
guaranteed rate of return Madoff had promised. Similar to the Mayfair Ventures and Grosvenor
Partners accounts detailed above, the Schupt schedule also indicated the number of options
contracts that would be “executed” to provide the fictitious gains in the Aster and St. James
accounts. These numbers were arrived at with the benefit of hindsight by selecting pricing for
option contracts that created a particular gain and dividing that gain by the dollar amount owed
170. For example, in or around December 2004, the Schupt schedule contains entries
for IA accounts held by Aster and St. James indicating that these accounts were each, owed
$42,000 in fictitious gains to bring the accounts to the promised rate of return of 11% then in
effect. Specifically, the Schupt schedule indicated that the “$ NEEDED” for Aster and St. James
were “42,000” each and both were to have “29 Unit[s]” executed in their respective accounts.
Upon information and belief, “Unit” represented one executed option contract. The December
2004 account statement for the Aster IA account reflects the “purchase” and “sale” of 29 “S&P
100 Index – January 575 Call” and 29 “S&P 100 Index – January 565 Put” option contracts
generating $41,934, slightly less than what the Schupt schedule indicated was owed for the
guaranteed return. The December 2004 account statement for the St. James IA account also
reflects the “purchase” and “sale” of 29 “S&P 100 Index – January 575 Call” and 29 “S&P 100
57
Index – January 565 Put” option contracts generating $41,934, also slightly less than what the
171. The Schupt schedule created in or around December 2005 indicates that IA
accounts held by Aster and St. James were owed $356,000 and $284,000, respectively, in
fictitious gains to bring the accounts to the promised rate of return of 11% then in effect. Once
again, Madoff and his employees performed the impossible, all under the watchful eyes of
Avellino and Bienes. Specifically, the Schupt schedule indicated that the “$ NEED[ED]” for
Aster and St. James were “356” and “284” and that there should be “260 Units” and “208 Units”
executed in their respective accounts. The December 2005 account statement for the Aster IA
account reflects the “purchase” and “sale” of 260 “S&P 100 Index – January 565 Call,” 520
“S&P 100 Index – January 585 Call,” and 780 “S&P 100 Index – January 565 Put” option
contracts generating $353,080, slightly less than what the Schupt schedule indicated was owed
for the guaranteed return. The December 2005 account statement for the St. James IA account
reflects the purchase and sale of 208 “S&P 100 Index – January 565 Call,” 416 “S&P 100 Index
– January 585 Call,” and 624 “S&P 100 Index – January 565 Put” option contracts generating
$282,464, also slightly less than what the Schupt schedule indicated was owed for the guaranteed
return.
172. The Schupt process was regularly followed to create the fraudulent side payments
via highly profitable, wholly fictitious, non-hedged options trades to accounts controlled by
Avellino, Bienes and their wives from 1994 through 2007. Only the exposure of Madoff’s Ponzi
scheme in early December 2008 prevented the execution of the Schupt process for 2008.
173. These purported options transactions never occurred, and could not have occurred
in the amounts required to make the Schupt number without the benefit of hindsight, backdating
58
and fraud. Even cursory analysis of the account statements containing these non-hedged options
transactions should have alerted CPAs like Avellino and Bienes of fraudulent activity by
BLMIS.
174. Avellino and Bienes closely monitored their IA accounts to ensure that the
performance reflected therein was equal to the guaranteed rate of return and the full amount of
the fraudulent side payment. On at least an annual basis, Avellino, and upon information and
belief Bienes, performed reconciliations of the various IA accounts they controlled to determine
if the rate of return equaled what Madoff had promised. If the account showed a rate of return
less than the promised rate, Avellino, with Bienes’ knowledge, communicated this to Madoff and
DiPascali, so that Schupt number could be increased for the accounts to make up the difference.
Upon information and belief, Avellino, with Bienes’ knowledge, would also direct into which IA
175. For example, in May 1996, Avellino sent a letter to DiPascali with a detailed
spreadsheet responding to DiPascali’s calculation of the fraudulent side payment and guaranteed
rate of return that was owed to accounts controlled by Avellino and Bienes. Avellino’s
spreadsheet set forth in detail the amount of money owed for the guaranteed rate of return and
the fraudulent side payment for the years 1993 through 1995. Avellino’s spreadsheet analysis
and the letter attached thereto, in which he wrote the following, confirms that he carefully
tracked activity in his IA accounts and closely monitored the rate of return and amount of
I checked the information you sent me. The only correction I have is the
adjustment for the distribution of $1,216,000 for 1993 and $1,016,000 for 1994
and thereafter for [the] “OTHERS.”4 The net affect on the computation shows a
difference of $434,000 in my favor.
4
The term “others” refers to the A&B Business Associates.
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176. Similarly, in December 1998, Avellino sent a letter to DiPascali that further
demonstrated his involvement in the annual process of ensuring the fraudulent side payments
were provided through fictitious “trades” in accounts designated by he and Bienes. In this letter
Avellino wrote:
Yes, it’s that time of year again. Just a note to touch base about the accounts.
Please make necessary trades in all of the accounts: (1) Grosvenor Partners, Ltd.
(2) Mayfair Ventures and (3) Mayfair Ventures Pension Plan. I believe the total
base of the three accounts will be enough to even-up the balance due. My
calculations show that BLM was short (for 12/31/97) approx. $2,500,000. Please
send me a copy of the calcs you have for 1997 and 1998. (bold emphasis added).
177. As a result of Avellino’s letter, fictitious option trades were reflected on the
December 1998 account statements for the IA accounts for Mayfair Ventures, Grosvenor
Partners, and Mayfair Pension Plan totaling approximately $7.9 million. This amount
represented the amount of the fraudulent side payment and the guaranteed rate of return. Yet
again, Avellino and Bienes knew or should have known that the trading activity reflected on the
account statements they carefully scrutinized could not have occurred and was the product of
fraud.
178. Year in and year out, Madoff waved his magic wand and the fictitious gains found
their way into Avellino and Bienes’ IA accounts and ultimately their pockets. Accordingly,
Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes, Thomas Avellino, Grosvenor Partners, Strattham,
Mayfair Ventures, Mayfair Bookkeeping, Aster, and St. James knew or should have known that
the purported trading reflected on their account statements could not have taken place and that
179. In or around 1995, Thomas Avellino took up the family mantle and created
REDACTED
Strattham in order to reap significant personal profits from Madoff’s Ponzi scheme.
60
REDACTED
the director and president of Ascent, Thomas Avellino for all practical purposes, completely
182. REDACTED
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183. Upon information and belief, Avellino informed Thomas Avellino that Madoff
had promised to pay BLMIS IA accounts controlled by Avellino and Bienes guaranteed rates of
return, and that Strattham would receive similar guaranteed rates of return. Upon information
and belief, Avellino also informed Thomas Avellino that BLMIS would utilize the fictitious non-
hedged options transactions discussed above to meet the guaranteed rates of return.
184. The Strattham account was provided approximately $205,284 in additional profit
by BLMIS during the years of 2004 ($26,028) and 2005 ($179,256) through the use of fictitious,
non-hedged, and profitable option trades reflected in the Strattham account statements.
185. Consistent with promised rates of return for the Avellino and Bienes IA accounts,
in 1998 and 1999, the Strattham IA account received rates of return of at least 17%. Similarly,
the Strattham IA account received approximate returns for the year 2002 that almost precisely
matched the guaranteed rate of return of 14% received by the IA accounts controlled by Avellino
and Bienes. This continued through 2007, when the Strattham IA account received approximate
rates of return consistent with Madoff’s guaranteed rate of return of 11% provided to the
186. The payment of additional profits to Strattham through the recording of fictitious,
non-hedged options trades should have been an obvious indicator of fraud to Thomas Avellino,
Ascent and Strattham. Likewise, Thomas Avellino, Ascent, and Strattham also knew or should
have known that it was not possible for Madoff to guarantee and consistently deliver
predetermined rates of return. These defendants ignored these obvious red flags and/or chose to
look the other way as they collected exorbitant management fees and lined their pockets with
62
187. Upon information and belief, Thomas Avellino was accustomed to enriching
himself through questionable conduct and a willingness to cut corners when it suited his personal
188. REDACTED
189. REDACTED
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REDACTED
190. REDACTED
reflect that for the period of 2002 through 2008, Thomas Avellino withdrew more from
Strattham than he deposited or transferred into Strattham during that same time period.
Strattham also withdrew $4,250,000 from its IA account within 90 days of the Filing Date. As
detailed below, this constituted the withdrawal of principal invested in the Strattham IA account.
191. The Individual Defendants, the Entity Defendants and Ascent knew or should
have known that they were benefiting from fraudulent activity or, at a minimum, failed to
exercise reasonable due diligence of BLMIS and its auditors in connection with the Ponzi
scheme. In addition to the allegations set forth above, the defendants were on notice of the
192. BLMIS, which reputedly ran the world’s largest hedge fund, was purportedly
audited by Friehling & Horowitz, an accounting firm that had three employees with offices
located in a strip mall. Of the two accountants at the firm, one was semi-retired and living in
Florida for many years prior to the Filing Date. No experienced business person, especially
CPAs with decades of accounting experience as Avellino and Bienes had, could have reasonably
believed it possible for any such firm to have competently audited an entity the size of BLMIS.
Because the outside auditor was woefully unqualified to audit a broker-dealer of BLMIS’s size,
Avellino and Bienes knew they could demand guaranteed rates of return and fraudulent side
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193. Despite its immense size in terms of assets under management, BLMIS was
outside professionals. Because all the key senior management positions at BLMIS were held by
members of Madoff’s family, Avellino and Bienes knew they could demand guaranteed rates of
return and fraudulent side payments and no one at BLMIS would raise an objection or question
194. For decades, Madoff provided Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes, and
Thomas Avellino, and the entities created for their benefit and under their dominion and control,
with the significant financial incentives described herein so that the defendants would and did
195. Prior to February 6, 2009, Bienes was aware of ongoing investigations by the FBI,
U.S. Department of Justice (the “DOJ”), and the SEC into the fraud perpetrated at BLMIS.
Bienes knew that the FBI, the DOJ, and the SEC were actively attempting to identify persons
who aided and abetted Madoff and BLMIS in conducting the fraud or who had contemporaneous
personal knowledge of Madoff’s and others’ fraudulent acts prior to December 12, 2008. Bienes
was also aware that the Trustee was conducting his own investigation into the fraud perpetrated
at BLMIS to recover assets for the benefit of the estate from individuals and entities who
received avoidable transfers of fictitious profits and/or transfers of principal under circumstances
for the Public Broadcasting Service’s Frontline television program. During the interview,
Bienes gave numerous false answers knowing that significant portions of the interview would be
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broadcast on national television. Bienes knew and understood that individuals working on
investigations being conducted by the FBI, the DOJ, the SEC, and the Trustee would likely see
portions of his interview. Upon information and belief, Bienes intentionally gave false answers
in the interview in an attempt to obscure his conduct and knowledge relating to BLMIS.
197. For example, notwithstanding Bienes’ knowledge of the creation of the Phony
A&B IA Account, the fraudulent alteration of previously issued BLMIS account statements, his
own false testimony to the SEC, and the years of fraudulent side payments paid via fictitious
options trades, Bienes falsely denied having any inkling that fraudulent conduct was occurring at
BLMIS: “[a]s God as my only judge, on my mother’s grave, not an inkling, not a tickle, nothing.
198. At one point during the interview, Bienes was asked whether he ever checked to
see that the stock transactions were taking place within the trading range of the stock on the day
that those stocks were ostensibly sold. Bienes answered no, and explained why he did not. In
his explanation, Bienes falsely stated that, “nothing ever jumped out at me.” Bienes also falsely
added that “everything was in a parameter. And the gains were small, never big” (emphasis
added). At the time Bienes falsely represented that “nothing ever jumped out to me,” he knew
that in June 1992 BLMIS had created fraudulent account statements with fictitious backdated
trades in order to make it appear to the SEC and others that A&B had assets sufficient to cover
199. Notwithstanding Bienes’ lie that the “gains were small, never big,” the account
statements for the Phony A&B IA Account included backdated transactions which resulted in
massive gains that should have aroused the suspicions of a reasonable investor. For example, the
backdated January 1991 statement reflects the purchase of 5,950 “S&P 100 Index – April 335
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Call” option contracts which were thereafter reported on the April 1991 statement to have been
sold for an approximate gain of $18,019,575. Likewise, the December 1991 statement reflects
purchases on December 12, 1991 of 3,500 “S&P 100 Index – January 355 Call” option contracts
and 3,000 “S&P 100 Index – January 360 Call” option contracts, which are reflected as sold in
the January 1992 statement for gains of $10,480,750 and $8,458,500 respectively. Bienes’
statement also conveniently ignored the fact that his withdrawals from the Ponzi scheme
200. When the interviewer asked Bienes what return he made on investments with
BLMIS after he reinvested following the liquidation of A&B in 1992, Bienes falsely stated:
I said to my partner, Frank, at that time: “How lucky we are. Thank God they
closed us down.” You know what we were getting? 9 ½, 10 maybe, at best.
Bernie said: “The golden days are over.”
201. At the time he falsely stated that they only made 9 ½ or 10 % at best, Bienes knew
that following the liquidation of A&B, Madoff had promised and delivered to accounts that
Avellino and Bienes controlled guaranteed rates of return of 17%, which were later reduced to
14% and then 11%. Bienes knew that accounts that he and Avellino controlled had also received
the fraudulent side payments, in addition to the guaranteed rates of return, which provided
202. During the interview, Bienes also made the following false statement:
When I left Bernie in ’93, and he allowed us to reinvest, I walked away from the
whole thing . . . I swear to God in all [H]is mercy I left it all behind. I had no
clients. I brought no one to him. I never mentioned his name. . . .
The interviewer thereafter asked Bienes where the A&B investors went, to which Bienes falsely
responded, “I don’t know where they went, and I couldn’t care less.” When the interviewer
asked whether Bienes advised people to call the principal of S&P and P&S, Bienes adamantly
responded, “[n]o. Absolutely not. Never.” When asked who introduced all the clients that used
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to invest in A&B to S&P and P&S, Bienes, despite having received a percentage of the
management fees A&B investors paid to P&S Associates and S&P Associates, falsely answered:
203. The interviewer also commented to Bienes that almost all of the A&B investors
went back to Madoff. Bienes, whose accounts were benefiting from the fraudulent side
payments specifically calculated from the $336 million reinvested with BLMIS by former A&B
I don’t know if almost all of them did, because I didn’t track it. I didn’t care. I
was not interested. I ran and I hid in the tall grass and licked my wounds.
204. The interviewer specifically asked Bienes if Avellino had taken any money from
anyone and placed it with Madoff post-’92. Bienes answered, “[a]bsolutely not that I was aware
of. No. No. No. No.” Thereafter, Bienes was asked again whether Avellino was steering
people to the principal of P&S and S&P. Bienes knew that he and Avellino were receiving
payments from P&S and S&P for referred investors, but lied and stated: “I don’t know. I don’t
205. Bienes, having reaped the benefits of tens of millions of dollars of fictitious
profits from the Ponzi scheme which was other people's money, assured the interviewer:
And we never were pigs. That's one thing that kept us going: We were never
pigs. We were never pigs.
206. In one of the few moments of candor during the interview, in response to whether
Easy, easy-peasy, like a money machine. I always said I never lifted any heavy
weights . . . I never worked hard . . .
207. Despite knowledge of and participation in the fraudulent conduct set forth in this
Complaint, in response to a question of whether he believed the money Madoff provided was too
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good and too easy, Bienes attributed his “good fortune” to divine intervention in that “God
later, Bienes reconsidered and decided the safer course was not to answer questions about his
role in the fraud. He, his wife, Avellino, and Thomas Avellino asserted their Fifth Amendment
privileges against self-incrimination and refused to answer any questions about Madoff or
BLMIS.
209. Avellino’s, Bienes’ and Thomas Avellino’s knowledge and bad faith, as set forth
in this Complaint should be imputed to all of the Entity Defendants on the basis of: (i) their
equitable and/or beneficial ownership of those entities, and (ii) their domination and control over
210. Upon information and belief, Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes, and
Thomas Avellino were at all times the equitable and/or beneficial owners of certain of the Entity
Defendants and the accounts held in their names. Upon information and belief, Avellino, Bienes,
Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes, and Thomas Avellino not only formed, funded, directed and
controlled the Entity Defendants, they also retained the beneficial use over the funds and assets
of those entities, including their BLMIS accounts and directed and determined how and to whom
funds could be disbursed. Upon information and belief, any actions Avellino, Bienes, Mrs.
Avellino, Mrs. Bienes, and Thomas Avellino took with respect to the Entity Defendants’ BLMIS
accounts, with the exception of the KJA and Strattham accounts, were taken primarily for the
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211. Avellino, Bienes, and Thomas Avellino freely transferred funds between IA
accounts of the Entity Defendants and among bank accounts held by the Entity Defendants. For
example, Avellino and Bienes funded the St. James and Aster IA accounts with significant
212. Upon information and belief, many of the Transfers (defined below) were made
directly to the Individual Defendants completely bypassing any formalities required by the Entity
213. Furthermore, as set forth in paragraphs 15–25 above, one or all of the Individual
Defendants were also the ultimate controlling principals, managing members, or in control of the
general partners of all of the Entity Defendants. Upon information and belief, one or more of the
Individual Defendants dominated and/or controlled the Entity Defendants themselves or through
other entities they owned and controlled. The Individual Defendants acted on behalf of, and, in
effect, as agents for, the Entity Defendants, and thus their bad faith and knowledge should be
214. Additionally, based on the above facts, the corporate form of the Entity
Defendants should be disregarded. Upon information and belief, the Individual Defendants
routinely disregarded the corporate formalities of the Entity Defendants that they owned, formed,
funded, dominated and controlled, and freely transferred funds between themselves (or their
family members) and the Entity Defendants, including between certain Entity Defendant IA
accounts and the bank accounts of other entities that did not hold BLMIS accounts.
215. Upon further information and belief, the Individual Defendants deliberately used
the Entity Defendants, to shield from their creditors the fictitious profits and other fraudulent
transfers that they received from Madoff that they either knew, or should have known, were the
70
product of fraudulent activity. The creation of limited partnerships and corporate managing
partners was designed to shield the Ponzi scheme transfers these entities received from BLMIS.
Accordingly, there is no distinction between the knowledge and bad faith of the Individual
216. Avellino’s and Bienes’ knowledge and bad faith as set forth in this Complaint
should also be imputed to their wives, Mrs. Avellino and Mrs. Bienes, to the extent they were not
the absolute and beneficial owners of certain of the Entity Defendants. Based on information
and belief, Avellino and Bienes discussed with their wives information that should have alerted
Mrs. Avellino and Mrs. Bienes that BLMIS had been operating fraudulently. In many instances,
as set forth in this Complaint, Mrs. Avellino and Mrs. Bienes were owners of the Entity
Defendants as either general or limited partners. Mrs. Avellino and Mrs. Bienes benefited
greatly from Avellino’s and Bienes’ control of the Entity Defendants and the IA accounts they
held. Avellino and Bienes directed the transfers that were made to or for the benefit of Mrs.
Avellino and Mrs. Bienes. These transfers were made to Mrs. Avellino and Mrs. Bienes while
their husbands were on notice of the fraudulent Ponzi scheme and their bad faith should be
THE TRANSFERS
217. According to BLMIS’s records and based upon information and belief, A&B,
Avellino Family Trust, A&B Pension Plan, Mrs. Bienes, Grosvenor Partners, Mayfair Ventures,
Aster, St. James, Strattham, and KJA maintained accounts with BLMIS as set forth on Exhibit A
(collectively, the “Accounts”) and executed one or more of the following Account Agreements:
Sales of Securities and Options, a Trading Authorization Limited to Purchases and Sales of
Securities, and/or a Trading Authorization Limited to Purchase and Sales of Securities and
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Commons (collectively, the “Account Agreements”). The Account Agreements were executed
and delivered to BLMIS at BLMIS’s headquarters at 885 Third Avenue, New York, New York.
218. The Account Agreements were to be performed in New York, New York through
securities trading activities that would take place in New York, New York. The Accounts were
held in New York, New York, and the defendants sent funds to BLMIS and/or to BLMIS’s
account at JPMorgan Chase & Co., Account #xxxxxxxxxxx1703 (the “BLMIS Bank Account”)
in New York, New York for application to the Accounts and the purported conducting of trading
activities.
219. The Entity Defendants who held the accounts identified on Exhibit A were initial
transferees of the avoidable Transfers, as set forth and defined below. In addition, because
Avellino, Bienes, Mrs. Avellino, Mrs. Bienes, and Thomas Avellino, upon information and
belief, routinely disregarded corporate formalities, and dominated and controlled the Entity
Defendants, they were initial transferees of the transfers made to the Entity Defendants. To the
extent that any of the defendants were general partners, then they are individually liable for the
220. Avellino was the initial transferee of at least the following BLMIS accounts:
A&B related accounts (100126, 100127, 1A0045, 1A0046, 1A0047, 1A0048, 1A0049, 1A0050,
1A0051, and 1A0053), Grosvenor Partners (1ZB046), Mayfair Ventures (1ZB032), Aster
221. Mrs. Avellino was the initial transferee of at least the following BLMIS accounts:
222. Bienes and Mrs. Bienes were initial transferees of at least the following BLMIS
accounts: A&B related accounts (1A0045, 1A0046, 1A0047, 1A0048, 1A0049, 1A0050,
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1A0051, and 1A0053), Diane K. Bienes (1B0018), Grosvenor Partners (1ZB046), Mayfair
223. Thomas Avellino was the initial transferee of at least the following BLMIS
224. The Entity Defendants are either initial transferees of the Transfers or conduits of
such Transfers for the benefit of the Individual Defendants. If the Entity Defendants are the
initial transferees of the Transfers, then the Individual Defendants are the subsequent transferees
for the purposes of this Complaint and are included in the definition of Subsequent Transferee
Defendants (defined below). To the extent the Entity Defendants are determined to be a conduit
for the funds withdrawn for the benefit of the Individual Defendants, the Individual Defendants
are initial transferees for whose benefit such transfers were made for purposes of this Complaint.
To the extent the Entity Defendants are determined to be a conduit for the funds withdrawn for
the benefit of the Subsequent Transferee Defendants, the Subsequent Transferee Defendants are
initial transferees for whose benefit such transfers were made, for the purposes of this Complaint.
225. From at least April 1981, the Individual Defendants, the Entity Defendants and
principal, fictitious profits, and management/professional fees from the Accounts (the
“Transfers”) under circumstances that should have put them on notice that the Transfers were
fraudulent. See Exhibit A. Of this amount, at least $571,148,626 constituted non-existent profits
supposedly earned in the Accounts (the “Fictitious Profits”), and approximately $333,367,063
constituted the return of principal. The Fictitious Profits received by the Individual Defendants,
the Entity Defendants, and Subsequent Transferee Defendants were other people’s money.
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226. Upon information and belief, some or all of the Transfers were transferred from
BLMIS into one or more bank accounts held jointly by Avellino and Mrs. Avellino. To the
extent that Avellino and Mrs. Avellino received some or all of the Transfers from BLMIS
through one or more jointly held bank accounts, Avellino and Mrs. Avellino are jointly and
227. Upon information and belief, some or all of the Transfers were transferred from
BLMIS into one or more bank accounts held jointly by Bienes and Mrs. Bienes. To the extent
that Bienes and Mrs. Bienes received some or all of the Transfers from BLMIS through one or
more jointly held bank accounts, Bienes and Mrs. Bienes are jointly and severally liable for the
228. From at least April 1981, the Individual Defendants, the Entity Defendants and
principal and fictitious profits, from the Accounts under circumstances that should have put these
defendants on notice that the Transfers were fraudulent. See Exhibit A. Of this amount, at least
229. The Full History Fraudulent Transfers are avoidable and recoverable under
sections 544, 548(a), 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code, applicable provisions of SIPA,
particularly 78fff-2(c)(3), applicable provisions of DCL sections 273–279, and CPLR sections
203(g) and 213(8). The Full History Fraudulent Transfers were directly or indirectly made to or
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230. During the six years prior to the filing date, BLMIS made payments of more than
represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme (collectively, the “Six Year Fraudulent
231. The Six Year Fraudulent Transfers are avoidable and recoverable under sections
544, 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code, applicable provisions of SIPA, particularly 78fff-
2(c)(3), and applicable provisions of DCL sections 273–279. The Six Year Fraudulent Transfers
were directly or indirectly made to, or for the benefit of the defendants, as set forth below.
232. During the two years prior to the Filing Date, BLMIS made payments of at least
represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme (collectively, the “Two Year Fraudulent
233. The Two Year Fraudulent Transfers are avoidable and recoverable under sections
548, 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code and applicable provisions of SIPA, particularly
section 78fff-2(c)(3), and applicable provisions of DCL sections 273–279. The Two Year
Transfers were directly or indirectly made to, or for the benefit of the defendants, as set forth
below:
Frank Avellino
through IA accounts held by entities Avellino controlled and personal IA accounts managed by
return of principal and at least $523,823,631 represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme.
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A detailed list of the Full History Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Avellino is
$38,200,000 represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Avellino is attached as Exhibits B1–B14,
Column 6; and
through IA accounts held by entities Avellino controlled, all of which represented fictitious
profits from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit B, Column 5. A detailed list of the Two Year
Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Avellino is attached as Exhibits B1–B14,
Column 7.
Michael Bienes
$558,778,289 represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Full
History Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Bienes is attached as Exhibits C1–
C11, Column 5;
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Approximately $1,000,000 of this amount constituted a return of principal and at least
$48,650,000 represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Bienes is attached as Exhibits C1–C11,
Column 6; and
through IA accounts held by entities Bienes controlled, all of which represented fictitious profits
from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit C, Column 5. A detailed list of the Two Year Fraudulent
Transfers made to or for the benefit of Bienes is attached as Exhibits C1–C11, Column 7.
Nancy Avellino
through IA accounts held by entities that were controlled by Avellino. See Exhibit D, Column 3.
$69,601,400 represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Full
History Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Mrs. Avellino is attached as Exhibits
D1–D3, Column 5;
through IA accounts held by entities Avellino controlled, all of which represented fictitious
profits from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit D, Column 4. A detailed list of the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Mrs. Avellino is attached as Exhibits D1–D3,
Column 6; and
through IA accounts held by entities Avellino controlled, all of which represented fictitious
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profits from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit D, Column 5. A detailed list of the Two Year
Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Mrs. Avellino is attached as Exhibits D1–D3,
Column 7.
Dianne Bienes
through IA accounts held by entities which were controlled by Mrs. Bienes and/or Bienes, and an
IA account held in her name. See Exhibit E, Column 3. Of this amount, approximately
profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Full History Fraudulent Transfers made to
$48,650,000 represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Mrs. Bienes is attached as Exhibits E1–E11,
Column 6; and
through IA accounts held by entities Bienes controlled, all of which represented fictitious profits
from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit E, Column 5. A detailed list of the Two Year Fraudulent
Transfers made to or for the benefit of Mrs. Bienes is attached as Exhibits E1–E11, Column 7.
Thomas Avellino
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a. Full History Fraudulent Transfers of at least $23,820,000 in principal
withdrawn from BLMIS through the IA account held in the name of Strattham an entity which
Thomas Avellino controlled. See Exhibit F, Column 3. A detailed list of the Full History
Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Thomas Avellino is attached as Exhibit F1,
Column 5;
withdrawn from BLMIS through an IA account held in the name of Strattham, an entity which
Thomas Avellino controlled. See Exhibit F, Column 4. A detailed list of the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Thomas Avellino is attached as Exhibit F1,
Column 6; and
withdrawn from BLMIS through an IA account held in the name of Strattham, an entity which
Thomas Avellino controlled. See Exhibit F, Column 5. A detailed list of the Two Year
Fraudulent Transfers made to or for the benefit of Thomas Avellino is attached as Exhibit F,
Column 7.
through six IA accounts held in the name of A&B. See Exhibit G, Column 3. Of this amount,
represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Full History
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Avellino Family Trust
through an IA account held in the name of Avellino Family Trust. See Exhibit H, Column 3. Of
this amount, approximately $400,000 constituted a return of principal and at least $350,000
represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Full History
Fraudulent Transfers made to Avellino Family Trust is attached as Exhibit H1, Column 5.
through an IA account held in the name of Avellino Family Trust. See Exhibit I, Column 3. Of
this amount, approximately $4,350,138 constituted a return of principal and at least $2,816,585
represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Full History
Fraudulent Transfers made to A&B Pension Plan is attached as Exhibit I1, Column 5.
Grosvenor Partners
through an IA account held in the name of Grosvenor Partners. See Exhibit J, Column 3. Of this
represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Full History
through an IA account held in the name of Grosvenor Partners, all of which constituted fictitious
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profits from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit J, Column 4. A detailed list of the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers made to Grosvenor Partners is attached as Exhibit J1, Column 6; and
through an IA account held in the name of Grosvenor Partners, all of which constituted fictitious
profits from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit J, Column 5. A detailed list of the Two Year
Mayfair Ventures
through an IA account held in the name of Mayfair Ventures. See Exhibit K, Column 3. Of this
represented fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Full History
an IA account held in the name of Mayfair Ventures, all of which constituted fictitious profits
from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit K, Column 4. A detailed list of the Six Year Fraudulent
through an IA account held in the name of Mayfair Ventures, all of which constituted fictitious
profits from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit K, Column 5. A detailed list of the Two Year
Aster Associates
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a. Six Year Fraudulent Transfers of at least $7,000,000 from BLMIS through
an IA account held in the name of Aster, all of which constituted fictitious profits from the Ponzi
scheme. See Exhibit L, Column 4. A detailed list of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers made to
through an IA account held in the name of Aster, all of which constituted fictitious profits from
the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit L, Column 5. A detailed list of the Two Year Fraudulent
through an IA account held in the name of St. James. See Exhibit M, Column 4. Of this amount,
fictitious profits from the Ponzi scheme. A detailed list of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers
through an IA account held in the name of St. James, all of which constituted fictitious profits
from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit M, Column 5. A detailed list of the Two Year Fraudulent
BLMIS through an IA account held in the name of KJA, all of which constituted a return of
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principal. See Exhibit N, Column 3. A detailed list of the Full History Fraudulent Transfers
an IA account held in the name of KJA, all of which constituted a return of principal. See
Exhibit N, Column 4. A detailed list of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers made to KJA is
Strattham Partners
through an IA account held in the name of Strattham, all of which constituted a return of
principal. See Exhibit O, Column 3. A detailed list of the Full History Fraudulent Transfers
through an IA account held in the name of Strattham, all of which constituted a return of
principal. See Exhibit O, Column 4. A detailed list of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers made
through an IA account held in the name of Strattham, all of which constituted fictitious profits
from the Ponzi scheme. See Exhibit O, Column 5. A detailed list of the Two Year Fraudulent
248. During the 90-day period prior to the Filing Date, Strattham received transfers
constituting the return of principal in the amount of $4,250,000 (the “Preference Transfers”).
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The Preference Transfers were directly or indirectly made to Strattham and Thomas Avellino, as
a general partner, and include, but are not limited to, the Transfers listed in Exhibit O1, Column
249. The Preference Transfers are recoverable under sections 547, 550(a), and 551 of
the Bankruptcy Code and applicable provisions of SIPA, particularly SIPA section 78fff-2(c)(3).
250. Upon information and belief, all or a portion of the avoidable transfers set forth
above were subsequently transferred to one or more of the defendants named in this Complaint
(the “Subsequent Transfers”). Upon information and belief, the following defendants received
the Subsequent Transfers of the avoidable fraudulent transfers referenced below, which are
recoverable pursuant to section 550(a) of the Bankruptcy Code: (a) the Entity Defendants; (b)
Avellino, individually, and as Trustee for the following trusts: FJA Revocable Trust Number
One 1990, FJA GRAT 1992, FJA GRAT Two 1992, FJA Revocable Trust Number One 1988,
Heather Lowles Trust, Tiffany Lowles Trust, Melanie Lowles Trust, Taylor McEvoy Trust,
Madison McEvoy Trust, S. A. GRAT, N. A. GRAT, St. A. GRAT, Avellino Family Trust, and
A&B Pension Plan; (c) Mrs. Avellino, individually, and as Trustee for the following Trusts:
Nancy Avellino GRAT 1992, Rachel Rosenthal Trust, Rachel Rosenthal Trust #3, Heather
Lowles Trust, Tiffany Lowles Trust, Melanie Lowles Trust, Taylor McEvoy Trust and Madison
McEvoy Trust; (d) FJA Revocable Trust Number One 1990; (e) FJA GRAT 1992; (f) FJA
GRAT Two 1992; (g) FJA Revocable Trust Number One 1988; (h) Nancy Avellino GRAT 1992;
(i) Thomas Avellino; (j) Joseph Avellino; (k) Mrs. Bienes, individually, and as Trustee for the
following Trusts: Dianne Bienes GRAT and T. C. D. Trust; (l) Bienes, individually, and as
Trustee for Glenn Dydo Trust, and A&B Pension Plan; (m) Dianne Bienes GRAT; (n) Glenn
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Dydo; (o) Sandra Dydo; (p) Glenn Dydo Trust; (q) Lorraine McEvoy; (r) Michael McEvoy; (s)
AFF; (t) Rachel Rosenthal; (u) Rachel Rosenthal Trust; (v) the Rachel Rosenthal Trust #3; (w)
Taylor McEvoy Trust; (x) Taylor McEvoy; (y) Madison McEvoy Trust; (z) Madison McEvoy;
(aa) S. A. GRAT; (bb) S. A.; (cc) N. A. GRAT, (dd) N. A.; (ee) St. A. GRAT; (ff) St. A.; (gg)
Heather Lowles Trust; (hh) Heather Lowles; (ii) Tiffany Lowles Trust; (jj) Tiffany Lowles; (kk)
Devon Paxson; (ll) Roslyck Paxson; (mm) Melanie Lowles Trust; (nn) T. C. D.; (oo) Ascent;
(pp) 27 Cliff; (qq) Mayfair Bookkeeping; (rr) T. C. D. Trust; (ss) Melanie Lowles; and (tt) Optus
251. Upon information and belief, some or all of the Preference Transfers were
252. The Subsequent Transfers, or the value thereof, are recoverable from the
253. To the extent that any of the recovery counts may be inconsistent with each other,
254. The Trustee’s investigation is ongoing, and the Trustee reserves the right to: (i)
supplement the information regarding the Transfers and any additional transfers, and (ii) seek
CUSTOMER CLAIMS
255. Some of the defendants named herein filed customer claims (the “Customer
claims.
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257. On December 23, 2008, this Court entered an Order on Application for Entry of
an Order Approving Form and Manner of Publication and Mailing of Notices, Specifying
Procedures for Filing, Determination and Adjudication of Claims, and Providing Other Relief
(the “Claims Procedures Order;” Docket No. 12). The Claims Procedures Order includes a
process for determination and allowance of claims under which the Trustee has been operating.
258. There were no objections to the Determinations filed with the Court. Having
failed to file an objection to the Determinations, pursuant to the Claims Procedures Order, the
Determinations are final and such claims are disallowed for all purposes.
determinations have been made as yet (the “Undetermined Customer Claims”) through a separate
COUNT ONE:
FRAUDULENT TRANSFER – 11 U.S.C. §§ 548(a)(1)(A), 550(a), AND 551
260. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
261. Each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers was made on or within two years
262. Each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers constituted a transfer of an interest of
BLMIS in property within the meaning of sections 101(54) and 548(a) of the Bankruptcy Code
263. Each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers was made by BLMIS with the actual
intent to hinder, delay, or defraud some or all of BLMIS’s then existing or future creditors.
BLMIS made the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers to or for the benefit of the defendants
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264. Each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers constitute a fraudulent transfer
avoidable by the Trustee pursuant to section 548(a)(1)(A) of the Bankruptcy Code pursuant to
265. As a result of the foregoing, pursuant to sections 548(a)(1)(A), 550(a), and 551 of
the Bankruptcy Code, the Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants identified in
Exhibit Q who, directly or indirectly, received the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers: (a) avoiding
and preserving the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers, (b) directing that the Two Year Fraudulent
Transfers be set aside, and (c) recovering the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value
COUNT TWO:
FRAUDULENT TRANSFER – 11 U.S.C. §§ 548(a)(1)(B), 550(a), AND 551
266. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
267. Each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers was made on or within two years
268. Each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers constitutes a transfer of an interest of
BLMIS in property within the meaning of sections 101(54) and 548(a) of the Bankruptcy Code
269. BLMIS received less than a reasonably equivalent value in exchange for each of
270. At the time of each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers, BLMIS was insolvent,
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271. At the time of each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers, BLMIS was engaged
272. At the time of each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers, BLMIS intended to
incur, or believed that it would incur, debts that would be beyond BLMIS’s ability to pay as such
debts matured.
273. Each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers constitute fraudulent transfers
avoidable by the Trustee pursuant to section 548(a)(1)(B) of the Bankruptcy Code, and
274. As a result of the foregoing, pursuant to sections 548(a)(1)(B), 550(a), and 551 of
the Bankruptcy Code, the Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants identified in
Exhibit Q who, directly or indirectly, received Two Year Fraudulent Transfers: (a) avoiding and
preserving the Two Year Transfers, (b) directing that the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers be set
aside, and (c) recovering the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit
COUNT THREE:
FRAUDULENT TRANSFER – NEW YORK DEBTOR AND CREDITOR LAW
§§ 276, 276-a, 278, AND/OR 279, AND 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 550(a), AND 551
275. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
276. At all times relevant to the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, there have been one or
more creditors who have held and still hold matured or unmatured unsecured claims against
BLMIS that are allowable under section 502 of the Bankruptcy Code or that are not allowable
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277. Each of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers constituted a conveyance by BLMIS as
278. Each of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers was made by BLMIS with the actual
intent to hinder, delay, or defraud the creditors of BLMIS. BLMIS made the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers to or for the benefit of the defendants identified in Exhibit Q in furtherance
279. Each of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers was received by the defendants
identified in Exhibit Q with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors of BLMIS at the
time of each of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, and/or future creditors of BLMIS.
280. As a result of the foregoing, pursuant to DCL sections 276, 276-a, 278, and/or
279, sections 544(b), 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code, and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA,
the Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants identified in Exhibit Q who, directly
or indirectly, received the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers: (a) avoiding and preserving the Six
Year Fraudulent Transfers, (b) directing that the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers be set aside, (c)
recovering the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit of the estate of
COUNT FOUR:
FRAUDULENT TRANSFER – NEW YORK DEBTOR AND CREDITOR LAW
§§ 273, 278, AND/OR 279, AND 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 550(a), AND 551
281. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
282. At all times relevant to the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, there have been one or
more creditors who have held and still hold matured or unmatured unsecured claims against
BLMIS that are allowable under section 502 of the Bankruptcy Code or that are not allowable
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283. Each of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers constituted a conveyance by BLMIS as
284. BLMIS did not receive fair consideration for the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers.
285. BLMIS was insolvent at the time it made each of the Six Year Fraudulent
Transfers or, in the alternative, BLMIS became insolvent as a result of each of the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers.
286. As a result of the foregoing, pursuant to DCL sections 273, 278, and/or 279,
sections 544(b), 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code, and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the
Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants identified in Exhibit Q who, directly or
indirectly, received the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers: (a) avoiding and preserving the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers, (b) directing that the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers be set aside, and (c)
recovering the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit of the estate of
BLMIS.
COUNT FIVE:
FRAUDULENT TRANSFER – NEW YORK DEBTOR AND CREDITOR LAW
§§ 274, 278, AND/OR 279, AND 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 550(a), AND 551
287. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
288. At all times relevant to the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, there have been one or
more creditors who have held and still hold matured or unmatured unsecured claims against
BLMIS that are allowable under section 502 of the Bankruptcy Code or that are not allowable
289. Each of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers constituted a conveyance by BLMIS as
290. BLMIS did not receive fair consideration for the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers.
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291. At the time BLMIS made each of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, BLMIS was
engaged, or was about to engage, in a business or transaction for which the property remaining in
its hands after each of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers was an unreasonably small capital.
292. As a result of the foregoing, pursuant to DCL sections 274, 278, and/or 279,
sections 544(b), 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code, and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the
Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants identified in Exhibit Q who, directly or
indirectly, received the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers: (a) avoiding and preserving the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers, (b) directing that the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers be set aside, and (c)
recovering the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit of the estate of
BLMIS.
COUNT SIX:
FRAUDULENT TRANSFER – NEW YORK DEBTOR AND CREDITOR LAW
§§ 275, 278, AND/OR 279, AND 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 550(a), AND 551
293. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
294. At all times relevant to the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, there have been one or
more creditors who have held and still hold matured or unmatured unsecured claims against
BLMIS that are allowable under section 502 of the Bankruptcy Code or that are not allowable
295. Each of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers constituted a conveyance by BLMIS as
296. BLMIS did not receive fair consideration for the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers.
297. At the time BLMIS made each of the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, BLMIS had
incurred, was intending to incur, or believed that it would incur debts beyond its ability to pay
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298. As a result of the foregoing, pursuant to DCL sections 275, 278, and/or 279,
sections 544(b), 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code, and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the
Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants identified in Exhibit Q who, directly or
indirectly, received the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers: (a) avoiding and preserving the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers, (b) directing that the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers be set aside, and (c)
recovering the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit of the estate of
BLMIS.
COUNT SEVEN:
RECOVERY OF FULL HISTORY FRAUDULENT TRANSFERS – NEW YORK CIVIL
PRACTICE LAW AND RULES 203(g) AND 213(8), NEW YORK DEBTOR AND
CREDITOR LAW §§ 276, 276-a, 278 AND/OR 279 AND 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 550(a) AND 551
299. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
300. At all times relevant to the Full History Fraudulent Transfers, the fraudulent
scheme perpetrated by BLMIS was not reasonably discoverable by at least one unsecured
creditor of BLMIS.
301. At all times relevant to the Full History Fraudulent Transfers, there have been one
or more creditors who have held and still hold matured or unmatured unsecured claims against
BLMIS that are allowable under section 502 of the Bankruptcy Code or that are not allowable
303. Each of the Full History Fraudulent Transfers was made by BLMIS with the
actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud the creditors of BLMIS. BLMIS made the Full History
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Fraudulent Transfers to, or for the benefit of, the defendants identified in Exhibit Q in
304. Each of the Full History Fraudulent Transfers was received by the defendants
identified in Exhibit Q with the actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors of BLMIS at
305. As a result of the foregoing, pursuant to CPLR sections 203(g) and 213(8), DCL
sections 276, 276-a, 278 and/or 279, sections 544(b), 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code,
and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants
identified in Exhibit Q who, directly or indirectly, received the Full History Fraudulent
Transfers: (a) avoiding and preserving the Full History Fraudulent Transfers, (b) directing that
the Full History Fraudulent Transfers be set aside, (c) recovering the Full History Fraudulent
Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit of the estate of BLMIS, and (d) recovering
attorneys’ fees.
COUNT EIGHT:
PREFERENTIAL TRANSFERS – 11 U.S.C. §§ 547(b), 550, AND 551
306. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
307. At the time of each of the Preference Transfers, defendants Thomas Avellino and
Strattham were “creditors” of BLMIS within the meaning of section 101(10) of the Bankruptcy
308. Each of the Preference Transfers constituted the transfer of an interest of BLMIS
in property within the meaning of section 101(54) of the Bankruptcy Code and pursuant to
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309. Each of the Preference Transfers was made directly or indirectly to, or for the
310. Each of the Preference Transfers was made for, or on account of, an antecedent
debt owed by BLMIS to defendants Thomas Avellino and Strattham for the return of their
311. Each of the Preference Transfers was made while BLMIS was insolvent.
312. Each of the Preference Transfers was made within one year of the Filing Date.
313. Preference Transfers in the amount of $4,250,000 were made within the 90-day
314. Defendants Thomas Avellino and Strattham who obtained the Preference
Transfers received more than they would receive if: (i) this case were a case under chapter 7 of
the Bankruptcy Code, (ii) the transfers had not been made, and (iii) defendants Thomas Avellino
and Strattham received payment of such debt to the extent provided by the provisions of the
Bankruptcy Code.
315. The Preference Transfers are avoidable by the Trustee pursuant to section 547(b)
of the Bankruptcy Code and recoverable pursuant to section 550(a) of the Bankruptcy Code and
316. As a result of the foregoing, pursuant to sections 547(b), 550, and 551 of the
Bankruptcy Code and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the Trustee is entitled to a judgment against
defendants Thomas Avellino and Strattham who, directly or indirectly, received the Preference
Transfers: (a) avoiding and preserving the Preference Transfers, (b) directing that the Preference
Transfers be set aside, and (c) recovering the Preference Transfers, or the value thereof, for the
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COUNT NINE:
RECOVERY OF SUBSEQUENT TRANSFERS – NEW YORK CIVIL PRACTICE LAW
AND RULES 203(g) AND 213(8), NEW YORK DEBTOR AND CREDITOR LAW
§§ 273–279, AND 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 547, 548, 550(a), AND 551
317. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
318. Each of the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers, the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers,
the Full History Fraudulent Transfers, and the Preference Transfers are avoidable under sections
544, 547, and 548 of the Bankruptcy Code, DCL sections 273, 274, 275, and/or 276 and
section78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA.
319. Upon information and belief, the Subsequent Transfers were transferred by the
320. Each of the Subsequent Transfers was made directly or indirectly to, or for the
322. As a result of the foregoing and the avoidance of the Two Year Fraudulent
Transfers, the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, the Full History Fraudulent Transfers, and the
Preference Transfers pursuant to CPLR sections 203(g) and 213(8), DCL sections 273–279,
sections 544, 547, 548, 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code, and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of
SIPA, the Trustee is entitled to a judgment against Subsequent Transferee Defendants identified
on Exhibit Q: (a) recovering the Subsequent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit of the
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COUNT TEN:
DISALLOWANCE OF CUSTOMER CLAIMS
323. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
324. Certain defendants filed Customer Claims, some of which have not yet been
325. The Customer Claims filed for defendants Strattham (Claim #005410) and KJA
(Claim #012840) and Subsequent Transferee Defendant Mayfair Bookkeeping (Claim #012824)
should not be allowed pursuant to section 502(d) of the Bankruptcy Code, as those who filed the
Customer Claims are the recipients of transfers of BLMIS’s property which are avoidable and
recoverable under sections 544, 547, 548, and/or 550(a) of the Bankruptcy Code, DCL sections
273–276, and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, as set forth above, and have not returned the
326. The Claims Procedures Order includes a process for determination and allowance
of claims under which the Trustee has been operating. As a result of the foregoing, the Trustee
intends to resolve defendants Strattham and KJA and Subsequent Transferee Defendant Mayfair
Bookkeeping’s Customer Claims and any related objections through the mechanisms
COUNT ELEVEN:
EQUITABLE SUBORDINATION
327. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
329. Based on the inequitable conduct as described above, the customers of BLMIS
have been misled as to the true financial condition of the debtor, customers have been induced to
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invest without knowledge of the actual facts regarding BLMIS’s financial condition, and/or
customers and creditors are less likely to recover the full amounts due to them.
330. Based upon the inequitable conduct and actual and/or inquiry notice of the
fraudulent nature of the transfers made by BLMIS to the defendants identified in Exhibit Q, as
set forth above, the Court should exercise the full extent of its equitable powers to ensure that
claims, payments, or benefits, of whatever kind or nature, which are asserted or sought by
defendants KJA and Strattham and Subsequent Transferee Defendant Mayfair Bookkeeping
directly or indirectly against the estate – and only to the extent such claims are allowed – are
subordinated for distribution purposes pursuant to sections 105(a) and 510(c)(1) of the
Bankruptcy Code.
herein, is consistent with the provisions and purposes of the Bankruptcy Code.
COUNT TWELVE:
CONVERSION
332. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
333. BLMIS had a possessory right and interest to its assets, including its customers’
investment funds.
334. The Individual Defendants and the Entity Defendants converted the investment
funds of BLMIS customers when they received money originating from other BLMIS customer
accounts in the form of withdrawals and transfers, which included fraudulent side payments and
fictitious profits. As alleged herein, the Individual Defendants and the Entity Defendants took
money out of BLMIS to fund the lavish lifestyles of the Individual Defendants when they knew
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or should have known that the monies received from BLMIS were the result of fraudulent
activity. These actions deprived BLMIS and its creditors of the use of this money.
335. As a direct and proximate result of this conduct, BLMIS and its creditors have not
had the use of the money converted by the Individual Defendants and the Entity Defendants.
336. By reason of the above, the Trustee, on behalf of BLMIS and its creditors, is
337. The Individual Defendants’ and the Entity Defendants’ conscious, willful,
wanton, and malicious conduct entitles the Trustee, on behalf of BLMIS and its creditors, to an
COUNT THIRTEEN:
UNJUST ENRICHMENT
338. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
339. The Individual Defendants and the Entity Defendants have been unjustly
enriched. As alleged herein, the Individual Defendants and the Entity Defendants greatly
benefited from the receipt of stolen money from BLMIS for which they did not in good faith
adequately provide value. Rather, the Individual Defendants and the Entity Defendants received
these monies by enabling and aiding in a fraudulent scheme of which they knew or should have
known.
340. This enrichment was at the expense of BLMIS and, ultimately, at the expense of
341. Equity and good conscience require full restitution of the monies received by the
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342. The Individual Defendants’ and the Entity Defendants’ conscious, intentional, and
willful tortious conduct entitles BLMIS to recapture profits derived by the Individual Defendants
and the Entity Defendants utilizing monies they received from BLMIS including, by way of
example and without limitation, profits earned from real estate interests they purchased with
343. By reason of the above, the Trustee, on behalf of BLMIS and its creditors, is
COUNT FOURTEEN:
MONEY HAD AND RECEIVED
344. The Trustee incorporates by reference the allegations contained in the previous
345. The Individual Defendants and the Entity Defendants are currently in possession
of, or have control over, money which originated from BLMIS. This money is Customer
Property and belongs to the customer fund under the Trustee’s control. The Individual
Defendants and the Entity Defendants have no lawful or equitable right to this money, having
346. In equity and good conscience, the Individual Defendants and the Entity
Defendants may not retain possession or control of this money, which rightfully belongs to the
customer fund under the Trustee’s control. The Individual Defendants and the Entity Defendants
WHEREFORE, the Trustee respectfully requests that this Court enter judgment in favor
(i) On the First Claim for Relief, pursuant to sections 548(a)(1)(A), 550, and
551 of the Bankruptcy Code and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the Trustee is entitled to a
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judgment against the defendants identified in Exhibit Q: (a) avoiding and preserving the Two
Year Fraudulent Transfers; (b) directing that the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers be set aside; and
(c) recovering the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit of the
estate of BLMIS;
(ii) On the Second Claim for Relief, pursuant to sections 548(a)(1)(B), 550,
and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the Trustee is entitled to a
judgment against the defendants identified in Exhibit Q: (a) avoiding and preserving the Two
Year Fraudulent Transfers; (b) directing that the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers be set aside; and
(c) recovering the Two Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit of the
estate of BLMIS;
(iii) On the Third Claim for Relief, pursuant to DCL sections 276, 276-a, 278,
and/or 279, sections 544, 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of
SIPA, the Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants identified in Exhibit Q: (a)
avoiding and preserving the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers; (b) directing that the Six Year
Fraudulent Transfers be set aside; (c) recovering Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value
thereof, for the benefit of the estate of BLMIS; and (d) recovering attorneys’ fees;
(iv) On the Fourth Claim for Relief, pursuant to DCL sections 273, 278, and/or
279, sections 544, 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the
Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants identified in Exhibit Q: (a) avoiding and
preserving the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers; (b) directing that the Six Year Fraudulent
Transfers be set aside; and (c) recovering the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof,
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(v) On the Fifth Claim for Relief, pursuant to DCL sections 274, 278, and/or
279, sections 544, 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the
Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants identified in Exhibit Q: (a) avoiding and
preserving the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers; (b) directing the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers be
set aside; and (c) recovering the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the
(vi) On the Sixth Claim for Relief, pursuant to DCL sections 275, 278, and/or
279, sections 544, 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the
Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the defendants identified in Exhibit Q: (a) avoiding and
preserving the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers; (b) directing that the Six Year Fraudulent
Transfers be set aside; and (c) recovering the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof,
(vii) On the Seventh Claim for Relief, pursuant to CPLR sections 203(g) and
213(8), DCL sections 276, 276-a, 278, and/or 279, sections 544, 550(a), and 551 of the
Bankruptcy Code and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the Trustee is entitled to a judgment against
the defendants identified in Exhibit Q: (a) avoiding and preserving the Full History Fraudulent
Transfers; (b) directing that the Full History Fraudulent Transfers be set aside; (c) recovering the
Full History Fraudulent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit of the estate of BLMIS;
(viii) On the Eighth Claim for Relief, pursuant to sections 547(b), 550 and 551
of the Bankruptcy Code and section 78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the Trustee is entitled to a judgment
against defendants Thomas Avellino and Strattham: (a) avoiding and preserving the Preference
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Transfers; (b) directing that the Preference Transfers be set aside; and (c) recovering the
Preference Transfers, or the value thereof, for the benefit of the estate of BLMIS;
(ix) On the Ninth Claim for Relief as a result of the avoidance of the Two Year
Fraudulent Transfers, the Six Year Fraudulent Transfers, and/or the Full History Fraudulent
Transfers, and the Preference Transfers, pursuant to CPLR sections 203(g) and 213(8), DCL
sections 273–279, sections 544, 547, 548, 550(a), and 551 of the Bankruptcy Code, and section
78fff-2(c)(3) of SIPA, the Trustee is entitled to a judgment against the Subsequent Transferees
identified in Exhibit Q: (a) recovering the Subsequent Transfers, or the value thereof, for the
(x) On the Tenth Claim for Relief, the Undetermined Customer Claims shall
not be allowed pursuant to section 502(d) of the Bankruptcy Code unless and until the Transfers
(xi) On the Eleventh Claim for Relief, the Undetermined Customer Claims,
and any payments, or benefits, of whatever kind or nature, which are asserted or sought by
defendants Strattham and KJA and Subsequent Transferee Defendant Mayfair Bookkeeping
directly or indirectly against the estate and only to the extent such Customer Claims are allowed
– shall be equitably subordinated pursuant to sections 105(a) and 510(c)(1) of the Bankruptcy
Code;
(xii) On the Twelfth, Thirteenth, and Fourteenth Claims for Relief, the Trustee
is entitled to a judgment against the Individual Defendants and the Entity Defendants for
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(xiii) On all Claims for Relief, pursuant to federal common law and CPLR
sections 5001 and 5004, awarding the Trustee prejudgment interest from the date on which the
(xiv) On all Claims for Relief, establishment of a constructive trust over the
proceeds of the transfers in favor of the Trustee for the benefit of BLMIS’s estate;
(xv) On all Claims for Relief, assignment of income tax refunds received by
the defendants identified in Exhibit Q from the United States, state and local governments paid
(xvi) Awarding the Trustee all applicable interest, costs, and disbursements of
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(xvii) Granting the Trustee such other, further, and different relief as the Court
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