Obama Administration Sides with Banks in Madoff Case

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The Supreme Court is urged to let stand a lower court ruling that would bar Madoff trustee Irving Picard from pursuing claims against big banks.
Get more newsObama Administration Sides Banks Madoff Case N115551 - Business and Economy | NBC News Cloneon

The Obama administration is siding with big banks in a dispute over their alleged role in the Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme.

Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr., in a 22-page filing late Friday, urged the Supreme Court to let stand a lower court ruling that would bar Madoff trustee Irving Picard from pursuing billions of dollars in claims against the likes of HSBC, UBS and Italy's UniCredit, which Picard alleges helped enable the scam to take place.

Picard had also sued Madoff's primary banker, JPMorgan Chase, seeking some $19 billion in damages. Earlier this year, Chase agreed to pay $543 million to settle the case, but the appeals involving the remaining banks have continued. The banks have denied wrongdoing, and argue that Picard has no standing to sue them on behalf of Madoff's clients.

On the latter point, the administration agrees.

"Customers are entitled to bring — and have already brought — their own suits against respondents for allegedly facilitating Madoff's fraud," according to the filing. "If (Picard) were permitted to pursue the same claims while standing in the customers' shoes, that could raise complicated problems."

Legally, the banks have argued, Picard represents what is left of the Madoff firm — not the firm's customers. Allowing Picard to sue on their behalf is a duplication of efforts, the argument goes; and it theoretically could allow a future scam artist to sue those who were cheated.

The Supreme Court, which has not yet decided whether to hear the case, had asked the administration to weigh in.

In a statement, Picard spokeswoman Amanda Remus said Picard and his chief counsel, David Sheehan, "respectfully disagree" with the solicitor general's arguments. Remus said Picard and Sheehan are looking to the high court to review the lower court rulings denying their ability to pursue "billions of dollars in damages from the international financial institutions that facilitated Madoff's fraud."

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