Madoff Feeder-Fund Survives Dismissal Motion - 3/9/2010

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Copyright © 2001
Stanford Law School


2010 News and Press Releases

News News 2010


HEADLINE NEWS:

Madoff Feeder-Fund Survives Dismissal Motion
Kevin LaCroix

The D & O Diary. March 9, 2010

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EXCERPT: An astonishing amount of litigation followed in the wake of the Madoff scandal revelations, as I have detailed here. But thought the litigation filings have surged, the question remains whether the plaintiffs’ desperate attempts to recover their losses from third parties have any chance of success. This question was underscored by the March 4, 2010 ruling by a Luxembourg court that individual investors who lost money in Madoff’s scheme lack standing to sue UBS AG and its auditor Ernst & Young for losses in the bank’s LuxAlpha funds. According to news reports, the court said that the investor plaintiffs had failed to show they had suffered individual damage separate and apart from the funds themselves. They also failed to show any individual damage suffered by the alleged behavior of UBS or Ernst & Young. But though the Luxembourg dismissal received widespread coverage, there was a largely overlooked earlier Madoff-related case ruling out of Florida, in which the investor plaintiffs’ claims largely survived the defendants’ motions to dismiss. […] The Florida case arose on May 7, 2009, when seventeen plaintiffs filed a 62-page complaint in Palm Beach County Circuit Court against Madoff feeder funds Tremont Group Holdings and Tremont Partners, as well as three associated Rye Select funds. The complaint also names KPMG, which had serves as the Rye funds’ auditor, as a defendant. The plaintiffs’ complaint alleges that the Tremont and Rye Select Fund defendants failed to perform their professional duties, but rather simply turned invested funds over to Madoff. The plaintiffs allege that the defendants "did not analyze Madoff, investigate his companies, conduct significant due diligence, or ensure that there were rudimentary safeguards."

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