Madoff: Feds Seize Palm Beach Mansion, Yacht

April 2, 2009 RSS Feed Print

With miles of palm-lined beaches, lush gardens, and breezy tropical climates, Palm Beach, Fla., is known for its small-town charm and high quality of life. But in recent months, this normally serene resort community—with a year-round population under 10,000 saturated with the affluent baby boomer set—has been rocked by the Bernie Madoff investment scandal. The disgraced financier, 70, sought many of his investors in this town; several local families reportedly lost more than $100 million each.

In an attempt to recoup losses to compensate cheated investors, U.S. marshals yesterday seized two of Madoff's boats—including a yacht worth $2.2 million—and an unoccupied 8,753-square-foot, five-bedroom mansion in Palm Beach. Authorities changed the locks and took inventory of the property, valued at $9.4 million. The seizure hardly puts a dent in any aid to swindled investors.

Barry Golden, a spokesman for the U.S. Marshals Service, says the estate is no longer considered Madoff's property. Officials are seizing everything they can of Madoff's assets—including homes in New York and France—and are even seeking millions from his relatives.

Madoff is in jail and faces up to 150 years in prison when he is sentenced on June 16.

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Bernard Madoff

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My Populist rage is shockingly, slightly overwhelmed by my moral need to just do what is right when it comes to Bernie Madoff ie: the real axis of evil. Take it, take it all!

I love that the Feds are getting every player involved in this widespread ponzi scheme and who knows this might only be the beginning.

It's incredibly sad that so many people who have amassed such an enormity of wealth could be caught up and blind sided so easily and that the trickle down effect in the form of job loss at many reputable companies funded by these particular entities, or individual persons of power, is astonishing, horrific and sad all at once.

matt of MA 1:08PM April 02, 2009

howdy yall sup. you guys are dumb this is boring yup i agree ya'll are messin' up me head whell bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

zoey and alice of KY 12:38PM April 02, 2009

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Luxury is no longer the sole province of the elite. Upscale goods and services now target a much broader market. Kimberly Castro, deputy business editor of U.S.News & World Report, takes a look at the luxe life, from fine wines and cars to high-end real estate and wealth management. Though no elitist, Kim does admit a fondness for a bold bottle of Scout's Honor from Venge Vineyards and satiating her wanderlust in Europe.

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