From ESPN
http://espn.go.com/blog/new-york/mets/post/_/id/32323/mets-morning-briefing-8-17-11• Irving Picard, the trustee trying to recover funds for victims of Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme, received a favorable Manhattan federal appeals court ruling Tuesday that should impact the Wilpons. The court upheld Picard's standard for whether a person is labeled a net winner or loser in the Ponzi scheme. His standard: How much money did the person/entity invest versus how much did the entity/person withdraw?
The Wilpons and others had asserted that they should be viewed as losers because their bogus statements showed significant -- but nonexistent -- investments at the time Madoff was caught. (The Wilpons thought they had $500 million still invested, if memory serves correct, and asserted that was their loss.)
"The (Madoff) customer statements reflect impossible transactions and the Trustee is not obligated to step into the shoes of the defrauder or treat customer statements as reflecting reality," the court determined, according to Newsday.
Still, Wilpons' attorneys nonetheless assert his family should be protected -- at least in terms of retaining the principal they invested -- because Madoff was a broker and therefore it was not their responsibility to determine whether the swindler was aboveboard. Judge Jed S. Rakoff on Friday afternoon could rule on the Wilpons' motion to dismiss, or rule in their favor as a summary judgment, on Picard's $1 billion lawsuit against them.
The Wilpons could extricate themselves Friday from the $700 million in principal Picard wants the family to forfeit because he alleges they should have known what's going on. Yet he appeals court ruling should make it more difficult for them to escape being responsible for $300 million in alleged "fictitious profits" from the Ponzi scheme. Picard seeks that money whether or not the Wilpons should have known about the corruption.
Write Richard Sandomir and Ken Belson in the Times:
(Judge) Rakoff, who is known for his independent streak, could be bound by the appeals court’s decision concerning Picard’s claim for $300 million in fictitious profits. Anthony Sabino, a bankruptcy lawyer and law professor at St. John’s University, said that the court’s ruling in favor of Picard’s net-winners formula was based on long-established law that is “unassailable.” He added, “The $700 million is on shaky ground and at risk of being thrown out, but the $300 million, the base amount if you will, is made out of solid concrete with rebar built in.”