Bernie Madoff: 'The Banks Had To Know What I Was Doing'

Madoff: 'The Banks Had To Know What I Was Doing'
FILE - In this Dec. 17, 2008 file photo, Bernard Madoff returns to his Manhattan apartment after making a court appearance in New York. In December 2008, two of Bernard Madoff's most loyal employees met on a Manhattan street corner and fretted over a closely held secret that the rest of the world would learn about eight days later: that their boss, Madoff, was a con man for the ages. The exchange was recounted for the first time in a newly rewritten indictment this week expanding the case and charges against five defendants headed for a trial next year. The indictment brings into sharper focus the final few years of a fraud the government says dated to at least the early 1970s, two decades before Madoff claimed it began and well before 1992, when the government said in its original case against the defendants that the conspiracy began. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow, File)
FILE - In this Dec. 17, 2008 file photo, Bernard Madoff returns to his Manhattan apartment after making a court appearance in New York. In December 2008, two of Bernard Madoff's most loyal employees met on a Manhattan street corner and fretted over a closely held secret that the rest of the world would learn about eight days later: that their boss, Madoff, was a con man for the ages. The exchange was recounted for the first time in a newly rewritten indictment this week expanding the case and charges against five defendants headed for a trial next year. The indictment brings into sharper focus the final few years of a fraud the government says dated to at least the early 1970s, two decades before Madoff claimed it began and well before 1992, when the government said in its original case against the defendants that the conspiracy began. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow, File)

Big banks had to know Bernie Madoff was running a Ponzi scheme, according to Bernie Madoff.

In an email penned from jail, one of the biggest Ponzi schemers in history told Fox Business Network that those responsible for recouping his victims’ money should keep going after the banks where he had accounts.

“The Banks had to know what I was doing regarding the fraud,” Madoff wrote in the email.

Madoff, who was sentenced to 150 years in prison in 2009 for his multi-billion dollar scheme, has made this claim before. He told The New York Times in an interview from prison in 2011 that the banks "had to know" he was committing fraud, but chose to turn a blind eye.

Madoff had dealings with a variety of banks and hedge funds, and burned Madoff investors have tried to recoup funds from some of them. Madoff held an account at JPMorgan Chase that he used to shuffle money between offices in London and New York. In 2011, two Madoff investors sued the bank for $19 million, claiming they aided in his fraud, according to CNN. At the time, a JPMorgan spokesman dismissed the lawsuit as “meritless.”

The trustees responsible for returning the money to Madoff’s victims also sued JPMorgan and UBS, but a judge ultimately tossed out the suits.

JPMorgan didn’t immediately return an emailed request for comment on Madoff’s email from The Huffington Post Sunday.

Madoff has been rather prolific in recent months, penning multiple letters to news organizations from prison. In a January letter to CNBC, Madoff criticized Wall Street signing bonuses, saying they put too much pressure on the employees who receive them to promote special products. In addition, Madoff criticized the ills of modern finance in a letter to CNBC on Christmas Eve. He also emailed CNBC earlier this month, saying he wished he had gone to trial instead of pleading guilty to the fraud.

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