Madoff victim Richard Friedman speaks to media outside Manhattan federal court Monday in New York. Bernard Madoff received a 150 year prison sentence for orchestrating the biggest ponzi scheme in recent history.
Louis Lanzano, Associated Press
NEW YORK — Inside a packed Manhattan courtroom, Miriam Siegman and eight other victims of Bernard Madoff directed their anger at the 71-year-old disgraced financier.
Madoff "discarded me like road kill," Siegman said.
Even before the one-time financier was sentenced to 150 years in prison, Siegman hobbled out of the federal courthouse and into the media scrum that has followed the secretive money manager from his Upper East Side apartment seven months ago to this sentencing Monday.
There, anger toward Madoff appeared to have shifted more to the regulators that many believe failed to stop the massive fraud. Victims and nearby protesters took the government to task for not preventing Madoff's Ponzi scheme. U.S. District Judge Denny Chin said estimated losses for investors were more than $13 billion, but he said that was conservative.
The crush of TV cameras and reporters spilled out into the street in front of oncoming traffic as New York City police tried to hem in the crowd.
Siegman, surrounded by cameras, said she lost 40 years of savings and now scavenges for food. She also said the investigation cannot end with Madoff.
"The sentence itself is not the issue," Siegman said. "The issue for me is that this never, ever happens again."
Stories like that of Siegman, 65, who left the courthouse using a walker, were at the root of protests in a nearby park where people addresses a crowd from a podium.
There were many homemade signs, one reading "Madoff stole it. SEC ignored it. IRS kept it."
Siegman called for a reform at the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Securities Investor Protection Corp., which is in charge of distributing any recovered money.
TV news trucks had arrived as early as Sunday morning to secure a spot outside of the courtroom so they might get the first interview with victims. There were reporters speaking in Russian, and Chinese and German.
Officers repeatedly asked reporters and cameramen to move further from the courthouse so that people could leave. As the crowd ballooned, it moved closer to the courthouse door anyway.
Another victim, appearing frail and supporting herself on a rolling cart, began to feel faint while speaking with reporters. The questions kept coming even as she ate a cookie to raise her blood sugar.
- Looking for a hotel? See the best and worst...
- Many insurance plans fall short of law
- KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
- Studies try to find why poorer people are...
- Selling adventure: How Backcountry.com's CEO...
- Couple can't retire because of $116,000 in...
- Field of solar energy dishes to sprout at...
- Valerie Phillips: Fond farewell to Morgan...
- Studies try to find why poorer people...
28 - KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
19 - Couple can't retire because of $116,000...
19 - House GOP plans summer tax cut vote
7 - OIl prices drop; will gas follow?
5 - Self consumption is considered greedy,...
3 - Eagle Gate Tower renamed World Trade...
3 - Home prices dropped 2.6 percent in year...
2






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments