Madoff: The Final Word
4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars | 82 ratings
Price: 20.2
Last update: 08-15-2024
About this item
Fifteen years after Bernie Madoff’s arrest, renowned investigative journalist Richard Behar delivers the definitive account of history’s largest, longest-running financial fraud—featuring audio excerpts from archival interviews with Bernie Madoff from prison.
Some $68 billion evaporated during Bernie Madoff’s epic confidence game. Two people were driven to suicide in the wake of the Ponzi Scheme’s exposure. Others went to prison. But there has never been a satisfying accounting for how Bernie got away with so much, for so long. Until now.
Richard Behar’s relationship with Madoff began in 2011 with a simple email request from the inmate. By the time Madoff died in 2021, he had sent Behar more than 300 emails and dozens of handwritten letters, participated in some fifty phone conversations, and sat for three in-person jailhouse interviews—a level of access provided to no other reporter. Behar also established relationships with hundreds of regulators, prosecutors, FBI agents, investors, Wall Street experts, ex-employees of Madoff’s, family members, school classmates, and others.
The result is the final word on the criminal behind history’s most enduring fraud—and on those who believed him, covered for him, or locked him up. Behar illuminates not only the fraud’s origins—decades earlier than Madoff claimed in his confession—but also the complicity of investors, Wall Street insiders, family members, and some of the largest banks in the US and Europe.
Shocking, infuriating, riveting (and at times absurdly funny), Madoff shows us how Bernie ensnared thousands of investors. As Behar’s dogged reporting over the last fifteen years makes clear, however, there aren’t many innocents left standing by the end of this tale. Just about everyone involved is guilty, at a minimum, of humanity’s most consistent weakness: greed.
Top reviews from the United States
"Madoff" digs below the tedious overuse of cliches like "sociopath" and "narcissist" to give us a character who lies so much he may genuinely not know he's lying. Madoff is not just a pathological liar, he's a congenital one. He cannot help himself. Madoff lies because lying is who he is. On an interpersonal level, Bernie is no Manson -- no wild eyes or lunatic visions. In Behar's account, the reader can see why somebody would give Madoff their money, even all of it (including Behar's beloved aunt). Madoff's slickness lies in the fact that he isn't slick. Madoff can be cuddly, and we believe him -- and should -- when he says he feels guilty about the suicide of his son, a tragedy he accepts as having caused. At least on the surface. Behar's Madoff is a man who sheds tears, but one senses that he cries them for his fallen status rather than the damage he caused. Among others, Madoff, when pressed by Behar, dismissed Holocaust survivor and author Elie Weisel as being part of the spectrum of investor who had it coming.
The book is careful about not characterizing the alleged involvement of Madoff's sons and wife in the scheme as a slam dunk, but suggests with savvy that the family had seen enough of the proverbial iceberg that was above the surface that they might have been more curious about what might be below it. This is the most responsible assessment of the immediate family to date.
This book is much more than a text about data. It is one of insight and texture. My fear about finance books is that they often presuppose a level of Wall Street savvy that this reader doesn't have. Behar's contribution is not just the exceptional content, but its accessibility. It's an actual story with an antagonist and a plot — and one that is skeptical of past conclusions about heroes and villains that may have been premature. If you want to know what Bernie Madoff did and how he did it, many of these questions are answered. As to why he did it, perhaps mitigating circumstances aren't to blame. Maybe Madoff did it because that's just who he was.
Behar doesn't just expose the scheme's grotesque scale; he explores its insidious nature. It's a chilling reminder of how one man's lie can infect our supposedly secure financial system, like a slow-growing fungus.
From underfunded SEC professionals to esteemed investors, families, and Madoff's own sons, everyone became entangled in a web of delusion and greed.
Behar masterfully portrays them all: those who willfully ignored red flags, those who believed the illusion for their own gain, and Madoff himself, a man simultaneously confessing and casting blame.
"The Final Word” isn't just about a financial crime, it's a cautionary tale for our times. In an era of "alternative facts" and distrust in institutions, Behar reminds us of the devastating consequences of believing lies, especially when those lies come from trusted sources.