Madoff's Man

Fort Lauderdale multimillionaire Michael Bienes never cut ties with Bernie Madoff — even after the SEC shut him down.

Millionaire philanthropist Michael Bienes has been the toast of South Florida, a man who threw lavish parties and fundraisers at his $7 million estate on the Intracoastal, where he seemed to be a cross between Gatsby and Meyer Wolfsheim.

Now sources say he is a ruined man in that same opulent house, so anguished that family and friends are concerned he may take his own life.

The 72-year-old Bienes, they say, lost his own massive fortune in the Bernie Madoff scandal. The New York Times quoted a Bienes attorney saying the man had lost tens of millions of dollars. On top of that, Bienes steered hundreds of people, many of them his friends, to invest their savings in what turned out to be a $50 billion rip-off.

If you want to know the extent of the fallout from the Madoff scandal here, you have to start with the distraught man in the Bay Colony mansion. The Fort Lauderdale arts community has lost perhaps its greatest benefactor. Bienes abruptly resigned his board post at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts after the scandal broke. And the Archdiocese of Miami is also reeling from the downfall of a man it has knighted.

But it's not just the arts crowd or the church feeling the pain; it's all those friends, associates, and acquaintances whom Bienes fed to Madoff. Those same people, some of whom lost fortunes in the Madoff disaster, are now left to wonder: Did Bienes know Madoff's lucrative fund was a Ponzi scheme? Is he a perpetrator, a victim, or a bit of both?

"I heard [Bienes] lost everything," says Tony Stefanelli, a longtime friend who has lost about $14 million in the Madoff scandal. "I understand he was crying and everything else. I don't blame Michael and don't believe he was involved in any way with the scamming."

That may be true, but the fact remains that Bienes has already been caught violating the law for Madoff. Bienes and his longtime partner, Frank Avellino, were among the first "feeders" to Madoff's fund back in the 1960s, raising hundreds of millions of dollars from their accounting firm clients, friends, and just about anybody they could find who had money.

By the early 1990s, they were managing 3,200 investors who'd put in nearly half a billion dollars, all of which they funneled into Madoff's hands.

Unfortunately, the operation was illegal, because Bienes and Avellino were accountants and not licensed to trade securities. The Securities and Exchange Commission caught them in 1992, fined them hundreds of thousands of dollars, shut them down, and forced them to return $440 million in investments they'd raised.

But that appears to have just been a bump in the road in the lucrative relationship between Madoff and Bienes. Investors say Bienes and Avellino never stopped dealing with Madoff or raising money for the swindler's fund. They simply steered some of those same investors — who were accustomed to Madoff's famed 18 percent returns — to Fort Lauderdale accountant Michael D. Sullivan.

Two investors, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told me they were encouraged by Avellino and Bienes to simply put their money into Sullivan's account after the SEC returned their money. Both did so and both lost hundreds of thousands of dollars when Madoff went down."The only irregularity was that they were not registered to sell securities," says the investor, who lost about $200,000 and spoke on the condition of anonymity. "Everybody got every penny back, including interest. Nobody got hurt. So we were all sitting there with our money and put it back in with Sullivan."

Last month, Sullivan sent investors a letter saying all their money had been lost in the Madoff scandal, the source said. The Florida Office of Financial Regulation could find no broker's license or investment adviser's license in Sullivan's name. I called Sullivan's office and asked for comment regarding Bienes and Madoff. The man who answered the phone said Sullivan wasn't available.

"I am just helping out during this time," he said with an almost funeral-like tone.

In addition to the Sullivan connection, Bienes and Avellino partnered in a series of companies that also had investments in Madoff's fund in the years following the SEC action, according to another investor who produced documents proving it.

One document shows that among those investors was the Christ Church United Methodist, which Sullivan attends. When asked about the church's Madoff investment, Pastor Alex Shanks said he would call me back. He hadn't done so prior to publication time.

That investor, who also asked to remain anonymous, also provided documents from companies that were invested with Madoff and run by Bienes and Avellino. Avellino sold his $2 million house in Fort Lauderdale in 2007 and owns a winter home in Palm Beach.

It gets worse. Avellino was recently sued by the housekeeper of yet another residence, his $10 million summer home in Nantucket. The housekeeper claimed in Massachusetts civil court that Avellino caused her to sink her life's savings of $124,000 into something called the Kenn Jordan Foundation. She claims that Avellino informed her shortly before the Madoff scandal broke that all her money had been lost.

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  • Tellthetruth 06/22/2011 2:46:00 AM

     Alot of new information has surfaced since this piece aired over 2 years ago. It is now clear that Avellino and Bienes were the original feeders into this fraud, likely engineered it and grew fabulously wealthy from it. Of note, when the SEC investigation began back in 92 Avellino and Bienes admitted to keeping "no records" and when the judge called for an audit. Frank Avellino's retort was "I am not a cash cow and I will not be milked" and the audit and investigation were miraculously called off with the help of Ira Sorkin, their attorney, who was a friend and investor of Madoff's who once ran the SEC's New York office. Since then Bienes got his investors to reinvest with Madoff and he and Avellino were then given side payments of 1-2% of assets under management as a courtesy. Bernie referred to these payments as "schtupp money" paid to keep these two scumbags quiet. The trustee in the Madoff matter has since sued these two complicit criminals for over 1 Billion dollars in an attempt to recover both principal and profits. Avellino and Bienes are two of the worst shameless thieving lowlives on the face of this earth. They should be fully disgorged and the DOJ should pursue criminal charges against the both of them.

  • A friend 04/06/2009 1:01:00 PM

    Michael and Dianne Bienes are thoroughly delightful people who are being most unfairly attacked. They would not have invested their own money with Madoff and put their lifestyle and home at risk if they had known of the fraud that Mr Madoff was orchestrating. Those who attack Michael and Dianne now should be ashamed of themselves. The good that this couple have done in both the US and Britain is most impressive and I'd challenge those of you making such negative remarks to do as much for the arts and healthcare as this couple have done.

  • Broward Working Stiff 01/22/2009 1:43:00 PM

    Another corrupt Trustee at Nova Southeastern University. I say treat him just like they treated the landscapers and janitors at Nova. Kick him out on the street and have no sympathy for him. What goes around comes around. First Zachariah Zachariah being indicted for insider trading and now Biennes. What Trustee will be next? Wait and see, there is more to come. Nova's heiracy is full of corrupt people and they all need to be taken down.

  • Broward Working Stiff 01/22/2009 1:43:00 PM

    Another corrupt Trustee at Nova Southeastern University. I say treat him just like they treated the landscapers and janitors at Nova. Kick him out on the street and have no sympathy for him. What goes around comes around. First Zachariah Zachariah being indicted for insider trading and now Biennes. What Trustee will be next? Wait and see, there is more to come. Nova's heiracy is full of corrupt people and they all need to be taken down.

  • justseekingtruth 01/21/2009 5:58:00 AM

    Those who doubt Bienes would knowingly steer them, his own "friends" into a Ponzi are being terribly naive. Bienes' modus operandi was always to collect pools of money for Madoff and to take a hefty profit for himself. He kept things juiced by throwing wildly extravagant parties for his "friends" who were actually footing the bill themselves! This narcissistic scoundrel and his enabling evil spouse were incapable of having any real friendships. The Bienes' treated other human beings merely as objects to be profited from or in the case of the Catholic church and other charities to serve as a source of narcissistic supply who lauded them with knighthood and brass placques, testimonials and positions on boards of trustees.They are pathetic pathological liars, empty shells ready to crack. After they have lied for so many years are we now to believe them when they claim they have been ruined along with the other victims?

 

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