STUART M. BERNSTEIN, United States Bankruptcy Judge:
This omnibus proceeding is related to the liquidation of Bernard L. Madoff Investment
The Court conducted an evidentiary hearing on January 19, 2018, at which it heard the testimony of three witnesses and received into evidence numerous documents and portions of the deposition transcripts of several former employees of BLMIS, including Madoff, and Aaron Blecker, one of the Participating Claimants. For the reasons set forth in Part I of this opinion, the Court concludes that a PW notation appearing in a monthly statement supports the finding, in the absence of credible contrary evidence offered by a claimant in that claimant's case, that the customer received a cash distribution in the amount indicated.
In addition, the Court tried the objection to the Trustee's determination of the net equity claims submitted by Aaron Blecker ("Blecker Claims"). Mr. Blecker, individually and as joint tenant with his late wife, had four different BLMIS accounts (collectively, the "Blecker Accounts") over a span of approximately thirty years. Mr. Blecker contends that the Blecker Claims should be valued in the aggregate amount of $577,350.33, but the Trustee valued the claims at zero based on his treatment of the PW Transactions in the Blecker Accounts as cash withdrawals. For the reasons set forth in Part II of this opinion, the Court concludes that Mr. Blecker has waived any objection to the treatment of PW Transactions in the Blecker Accounts as cash withdrawals, and additionally, has failed to sustain his burden of proving the amount of his Blecker Claims. Accordingly, the Court sustains the Trustee's determination of the Blecker Claims at zero.
On December 11, 2008, Madoff was arrested by federal agents for violating numerous criminal securities statutes. On the same day, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York against BLMIS and Madoff. On December 15, 2008, the SEC consented to a combination of its own action with an application of the Securities Investor Protection Corporation ("SIPC"). The District
Among his other duties, a SIPA Trustee must determine each customer's share in customer property up to the amount of their "net equity," which is the amount the debtor-broker would have owed to the customer if the broker had liquidated the customer's securities positions, plus any cash deposited by the customer to purchase securities, less any sums owed by the customer to the broker. SIPA § 78lll(11). The Trustee's statutory obligation is to discharge net equity claims of customers of the debtor "insofar as such obligations are ascertainable from the books and records of the debtor or are otherwise established to the satisfaction of the Trustee." SIPA § 78fff-2(b).
The BLMIS books and records presented the Trustee with a challenge. Although Madoff claimed to execute various investment strategies for his customers, in reality, he neither bought nor sold any securities on their behalf. Instead, he deposited customer money into BLMIS' bank accounts, and used customer deposits to pay customer withdrawals. In re BLMIS, 654 F.3d 229, 232-33, 240 (2d Cir. 2011) ("Net Equity Decision"), cert. denied, 567 U.S. 934, 133 S.Ct. 24, 25, 183 L.Ed.2d 675 (2012). The securities transactions and holdings reported on customer statements were fictitious, but the actual cash deposits and withdrawals were accurate. See id. at 232 ("[T]he only accurate entries reflected the customers' cash deposits and withdrawals."). Accordingly, the Trustee determined to calculate each customer's net equity based on a cash in/cash out methodology (the "Net Investment Method"). Under the Net Investment Method, each customer's net equity is equal to the amount of cash or principal deposited by the customer less the amount of cash or principal withdrawn.
Over 16,000 claims were filed against the BLMIS estate, and the Trustee issued claim determination letters to each claimant.
Given the number of Participating Claimants raising the identical issue, the Court established a separate omnibus proceeding to resolve the issues related to the Trustee's treatment of PW Transactions. Order Establishing Schedule for Limited Discovery and Briefing on Profit Withdrawal Issue, signed June 24, 2015 (ECF Doc. # 10266). Thereafter, the parties engaged in discovery, including the taking of the depositions of Madoff and BLMIS employees Annette Bongiorno, Winifier Jackson, Dorothy Khan, Alethea Leung, and Joann Sala. In addition, Mr. Blecker, who is elderly, was deposed to preserve his testimony. The parties agreed to try Mr. Blecker's objections to the Trustee's determination of the Blecker Claims together with the omnibus issue regarding the appropriate treatment of PW Transactions under the Net Investment Method.
In order to assist him in the SIPA liquidation of BLMIS, the Trustee retained the professional services of FTI Consulting, including Ms. Lisa Collura and Mr. Matthew Greenblatt. Ms. Collura is a forensic accountant with more than twenty years of experience in financial fraud investigations and cases. She is a CPA, a certified fraud examiner and certified in financial forensics. Tr. 60:22-61:1. Forensic accounting is a specialty area of accounting in which CPAs or accountants gather, collect, review, analyze and interpret financial records and other evidence in connection with a fraud. Tr. 62:6-15. Based on her training and experience, Ms. Collura was qualified as an expert in the area of forensic accounting. Tr. 67:16-19.
Ms. Collura sought to reconcile cash transactions reflected on the statements of the BLMIS customer accounts with available BLMIS bank records and other sources and trace the flow of those funds — tasks typically performed by forensic accountants. Tr. 68:8-69:16; 76:11-20. The purpose of the reconciliation was to determine the reliability of the BLMIS records. Tr. 77:10-17. In addition to bank records, she reviewed documents in customer files and documents supplied by former BLMIS customers, the types of documents that a forensic accountant typically reviews in connection with a reconciliation. Tr. 77:22-80:14.
Ms. Collura produced an expert report dated July 14, 2015, spanning 705 pages ("Collura Report").
Mr. Greenblatt is also a forensic accountant with more than twenty years of experience in financial fraud investigations and cases. Like Ms. Collura, Mr. Greenblatt is a CPA, a certified fraud examiner and certified in financial forensics, and experienced in forensic accounting investigations. Tr. 164:19-165:2. He also teaches forensic accounting and has served as an adjunct professor at NYU's School of Continuing Studies in the forensic accounting certificate program. Tr. 165:4-13. Based on his training and experience, Mr. Greenblatt was qualified as an expert in the area of forensic accounting. Tr. 168:12-20.
Mr. Greenblatt oversaw the task of reconstructing BLMIS' books and records, and calculating the principal balance for each BLMIS account on a cash in/cash out basis (the "Principal Balance Calculation"). Tr. 168:23-169:8; see also Collura Report at ¶ 4 ("As part of our engagement, FTI was tasked with the exercise of reconstructing the books and records of BLMIS, including all records of the `cash in/cash out' transactions related to the BLMIS customer accounts as far back as the records allow."). Inflows, or credits included: (i) account balances reported on customer statements as of April 1, 1981 (i.e., the Trustee assumed the validity of all transactions up to that date); (ii) cash deposits; (iii) non-cash deposits; and (iv) inter-account transfers of principal into the account. Outflows, or reductions, included: (i) cash withdrawals; (ii) inter-account transfers of principal out of the account; and (iii) payments made by BLMIS on behalf of customers. Tr. 170:1-171:22, 192:7-15. According to Mr. Greenblatt, the primary and most reliable source for his analysis was the customer statements because they contained the most transaction information and were sent to customers who could identify any inaccuracies. The customer statements were available from 1981 through November 2008 in electronic format on BLMIS' servers, on microfilm and/or through copies produced by account holders. Tr. 172:8-173:13.
Customer deposits into and withdrawals from their BLMIS accounts were reported on the customer statements and designated with a "transaction code." BLMIS' "House 17 Manual," TX 80, identified the codes used for recordkeeping by BLMIS. The codes relevant to the Principal Balance Calculation were CA, CW, PW, and JRNL. Tr. 174:21-175-6. "CA" meant "Capital Addition," such as a cash deposit, which increased the customer's reported equity, "CW" referred to a "Capital Withdrawal" and "PW" referred to "Profit Withdrawal," both of which reduced the customer's reported equity. Finally, "JRNL" referred to a journal entry used for both credits and debits, depending on the transaction. The JRNL code was used mostly for manual adjustments and, typically, the first deposit into a customer account. Tr. 175:7-177:16; 179:12-18.
Mr. Greenblatt reconciled the transactions listed in the customer statements with other internal BLMIS records, including cash receipt records or "check-in books," cash disbursement records or "check-out books" (together with the check-in books, the "Spiral Notebooks"), Portfolio Management Reports ("PMRs"), Portfolio Management Transaction Reports ("PMTs"), and customer correspondence. These records are the type of evidence relied on by forensic accountants in performing their work. Tr. 199:15-19. The PMRs listed the customer's year-to-date summary level cash and principal transactions. See TX 88; Tr. 195:20-196:2. With some gaps, the PMRs were available from
PMTs included information on the capital additions, capital withdrawals and profit withdrawals on a per-transaction basis. Tr. 195:23-25. They recorded CAs as credits or increases to the reported equity and CWs and PWs as debits or reductions to the reported equity. See TX 87, TX 202, TX 208. PMTs were available from the mid-1980s until the mid-1990s with some gaps. Tr. 196:20-23; TX 87, TX 202, TX 208. The transaction entries and codes on the PMTs corresponded to the transactions and codes reported on the customer monthly statements, see Tr. 194:10-22, and were used to corroborate the cash and principal transactions reported on the customer statements. For example, the April 1992 customer statement for Mr. Blecker's account 1B0022 (at that time, numbered 1-00254-1-0), TX 205, showed a purchase of shares in "Pep Boys" for $99,466.66 and sale of shares in "Pep Boys" for $102,094.40, generating a profit of $2,627.74. Deposition of Jo Ann Sala, held May 19 and June 13, 2016 ("Sala Tr.") 110:25-114:8. The June 1992 customer statement for that same account, TX 206, listed a June 16 PW Transaction "Check Pep Boys" in the amount of $2,627.74 which corresponded to a check sent to Mr. Blecker in that amount. Sala Tr. 115:4-117:21; Bongiorno Tr. 117:21-118:4. The same PW Transaction appeared on the PMT, TX 208. In addition, the PMT reflected a PW Transaction in the account in the amount of $2,606.03 on April 28, 1992. The April 1992 customer statement, TX 205, listed a PW Transaction, "Check Fleet Norstar," in the sum of $2,606.03.
Mr. Greenblatt also reviewed the BLMIS Spiral Notebooks to confirm and corroborate the PW Transactions. Tr. 197:12-17. The Spiral Notebooks contained lists of checks received by BLMIS from customers (the check-in book), TX 89, and checks sent out by BLMIS to customers (the check-out book), TX 90. The check-out book, TX 90, contained handwritten notations identifying the checks, including PW checks, sent out on a particular date. Bongiorno Tr. 44:9-14. In addition to the date, the check-out book identified the customer recipient, the amount of the check and, in the case of PW Transactions, the related security that supposedly generated the purported profit. Tr. 199:6-14. These notebooks were available with gaps for various periods of time from the mid-1980s until the mid-1990s. Tr. 197:6-11.
Mr. Greenblatt disclosed that there were some changes to the data in the chronological listing of cash and principal transactions that were discovered during quality control reviews of the Participating Claimants' accounts. While these changes resulted, to the extent necessary, in adjustments to the Principal Balance Calculation for certain accounts, Mr. Greenblatt testified that he reviewed the changes and confirmed that they did not affect the conclusion he reached that PW Transactions were debits to an account's balance. Tr. 200:16-202:10.
As noted, the PW Transactions were treated as cash outflows and reductions to principal in determining the Principal Balance Calculation. BLMIS employees explained how PW Transactions were used to
If an account was set up to receive its profits, a check would be automatically sent to the customer for the amount of the profit at the conclusion of each deal. At the time an account was opened, the customer and Madoff orally agreed to send the customer the profits at the conclusion of each deal, or instead, reinvest those profits. Madoff would then instruct Ms. Bongiorno of the decision and direct her to memorialize it in the customer's account file with an appropriate notation. At times, Ms. Bongiorno confirmed the customer's instruction directly with the customer. Bongiorno Tr. 30:12-35:17, 38:19-22. The notation "R" on the customer's Name/Address File Maintenance form meant "reinvest" while "S" meant "send." Bongiorno Tr. 35:18-36:13. If an account was marked "S," PW checks were sent automatically and it was unnecessary for the customer to send a written request for the profits. Bongiorno Tr. 36:14-37:4; Sala Tr. 130:6-131:17. If the account was a "Send" account, a check would be made out in the name of the customer even though the transaction to which the check related would be listed in BLMIS' records with the notation "PW [security name]." Sala Tr. 82:6-83:5. The PW checks were never sent to the corporation identified in the PW Transaction notation. Sala Tr. 41:24-42:3.
Customers sometimes wanted to switch from "S" to "R," or vice versa. Prior to the computerization of BLMIS' records, the customer would speak to Madoff, but once the records were computerized, the customer had to send a written confirmation. Bongiorno Tr. 37:23-38:13. Upon receipt of the written confirmation, BLMIS employees would update the customer's file and enter the new information into the BLMIS computer system. Bongiorno Tr. 38:8-18; TX 191; TX 214; TX 215; TX 231; TX 232. Where a check was sent, the amount of the check would be listed in the "Amount Debited To Your Account" on the customer's statement as a reduction to the balance. Bongiorno Tr. 71:13-75:9; TX 81; TX 82; TX 191; TX 194; TX 195; TX 196; TX 197; TX 198; TX 204; TX 210; TX 214; TX 235.
The Spiral Notebooks were used for tracking incoming and outgoing checks to customers, including checks relating to PW Transactions. The Spiral Notebooks
Debit memoranda ("Debit Memos") found at BLMIS also corroborated the PW Transactions identified on customer statements. Debit Memos generated by BLMIS' computer systems included the words "PW CHECK + [security name]" (which matched the entry on the customer statement), the accountholder's name and address, account number, and the amount, date, and security of the PW Transaction. Attached to the Debit Memo was either a copy of the check for BLMIS' files or the check corresponding to that transaction for the customer (TX 230). Bongiorno Tr. 45:17-46:22, 80:6-81:20, 86:3-17.
In addition to the reconciliation of BLMIS' internal records as described above, third-party records also confirmed that PW Transactions were properly treated as outflows, or reductions to an account's net equity in the Principal Balance Calculations. There were approximately 91,000 PW Transactions between April 1981 and December 2008.
Prior to the Ten-Year Period, bank records generally were not available. Lacking bank records, Ms. Collura was able to corroborate approximately 54% of the PW Transactions as cash payments to the customer. Nevertheless, her conclusions regarding the Ten-Year Period support the inference that all of the PW Transactions reflect cash withdrawals. The testimony by the BLMIS employees confirmed that BLMIS created records and operated in the same manner before and during the Ten-Year Period as it pertains to PW Transactions. The inability to confirm a higher percentage prior to the Ten-Year Period was due to the lack of confirming evidence rather than the existence of contradictory evidence. Accordingly, the Court concludes that a PW Transaction listed in an account statement created prior
The Trustee's experts' conclusions are based on their analysis of BLMIS' records, and where available, bank and other third-party records. Many of the underlying records have been offered into evidence by the Trustee. The Participating Claimants, including Mr. Blecker, have objected to many of the exhibits offered into evidence, generally on one or more grounds including lack of foundation, failure to authenticate, hearsay and relevance.
In ruling on the objections, it is necessary to bear in mind that a SIPA trustee must make payments to customers based on their net equity "insofar as the amount owed to the customer is `ascertainable from the books and records of the debtor or [is] otherwise established to the satisfaction of the trustee.'" Net Equity Decision, 654 F.3d at 237 (quoting SIPA § 78fff-2(b)(2)). The Second Circuit has ruled that this determination should be based on a cash in/cash out analysis under the Net Investment Method. Net Equity Decision, 654 F.3d at 238. Furthermore, the District Court, affirming this Court, has ruled that the Trustee's inter-account transfer methodology, which applies the Net Investment Method to inter-account transfers ("Inter-Account Method"), is the "superior method as a matter of law" because it accords with "SIPA's statutory definition of net equity and its requirement that net equity be determined to the extent it is `ascertainable from the books and records of the debtor or [is] otherwise established to the satisfaction of the trustee.'" Diana Melton Trust v. Picard (In re BLMIS), No. 15 Civ. 1151 (PAE), 2016 WL 183492, at *9, *10 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 14, 2016) (emphasis in original) (quoting Net Equity Decision, 654 F.3d at 237 (quoting SIPA § 78fff-2(b)), aff'd sub nom. Sagor v. Picard (In re BLMIS), 697 F. App'x 708 (2d Cir. 2017).
The Trustee's computation of a customer's net equity in this case was based primarily on his experts' analysis of customer statements which treated PW Transactions as cash withdrawals, and the latter treatment was based on the experts' analysis of other BLMIS records and third-party records, including bank records. The Participating Claimants challenge the authenticity of the BLMIS records.
The proponent of evidence may satisfy the authentication requirement by producing evidence "sufficient to support a finding that the item is what the proponent claims it is." FED. R. EVID. 901(a). The authentication burden is a "light one." Curtis v. Perkins (In re Int'l Mgmt. Assocs., LLC), 781 F.3d 1262, 1267 (11th Cir. 2015). The Court is not required to hear the testimony of the document's author to demonstrate its authenticity. U.S. Bank Nat'l Ass'n v. PHL Variable Life Ins. Co., 112 F.Supp.3d 122, 144 (S.D.N.Y. 2015), reconsideration denied, Nos. 12 Civ. 6811, 13 Civ. 1580 (CM), 2015 WL 4610894 (S.D.N.Y. July 30, 2015). Authentication
Initially, the parties have stipulated to the authenticity of most of the internal BLMIS records. In the Stipulations [and Order] Regarding Designated Deposition Testimony and Admissibility of Certain Documents, signed Jan. 17, 2018 (ECF Doc. # 17136), the parties agreed that "[w]ith regard to the deposition exhibits referred to in any portions of the designated testimony, the parties stipulate that those exhibits are, where applicable, the books and records of the Debtor, but maintain their evidentiary objections to the admissibility of those documents under the Federal Rules of Evidence." Except for certain portions of depositions of Mr. Madoff and Ms. Bongiorno, all of the portions of the deposition transcripts designated by the parties were admitted into evidence. Post Hearing Submission at ¶¶ 1-4.
The Post Hearing Submission, Ex. A, identifies those exhibits that were designated and shown to the witnesses at the depositions. They include TX 190-238.
The trustee, himself a certified fraud examiner, testified how he had seized the debtor's files and reconstructed them to verify their accuracy. He satisfied himself as to their reliability by hiring an international accounting firm, subpoenaing records of the debtor's accounts from national banking institutions and cross-checking the debtor's records with records provided by investors and the banks, and interviewing the debtor's principals and employees, including the debtor's office manager, from whom he learned the procedures for creating the debtor's documents. Id. at 1265.
On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit agreed with the lower courts that the trustee had authenticated the debtor's books and records:
Id. at 1267 (emphasis added).
Here, the Trustee did not testify regarding his seizure of the BLMIS records or the chain of custody, but the testimony of his experts convince the Court that BLMIS business records are what they purport to be. Mr. Greenblatt testified and the Collura Report confirmed that their employer, FTI Consulting, was tasked with reconstructing BLMIS' books and records, and hence, bore the responsibility for assembling, analyzing and reconciling them. Thus, the experts were the ones who took possession of the BLMIS books and records for the purpose of their work, and I accept the implication of their testimony that the BLMIS records which they used to reconcile and analyze the customer accounts were what they purported to be.
In addition, the Trustee confirmed their accuracy through the same methods employed by the trustee in Int'l Mgmt. He obtained BLMIS' bank records, cross-checked them against BLMIS' cash transaction records and records provided by other customers, and matched over 99% of the PW Transactions that occurred during the Ten-Year Period. Furthermore, the former BLMIS employees who were deposed explained the office procedures and how the BLMIS documents were created, and these documents, including the PMTs, PMRs and Spiral Notebooks, where available, corroborated the entries on the customer statements. Finally, the older records were generally created in the same manner, are the same type and form as the documents shown to the BLMIS witnesses during their depositions and the Ten-Year Period documents that are unquestionably trustworthy. Accordingly, the objection to the authenticity of the BLMIS records is overruled.
Mr. Blecker challenges many BLMIS records, primarily records pertaining to other customer accounts, (TX 1, TX 4, TX 5, TX 6, TX 9, TX 10, TX 12, TX 19, TX
As stated, the purpose of this SIPA proceeding is to determine the net equity obligations to the extent ascertainable from BLMIS books and records or otherwise to the satisfaction of the Trustee, Net Equity Decision, 654 F.3d at 237 (quoting SIPA § 78fff-2(b)(2)), and the Second Circuit has already concluded that BLMIS' records of cash deposits and withdrawals are "accurate." Id. at 232. The BLMIS records offered by the Trustee, including the records relating to other customer accounts, were relied on by the Trustee's experts to analyze the PW Transactions and reach their conclusions. Moreover, this is an omnibus proceeding involving many Participating Claimants, and the "other customer" records relied on by the experts tends to make it more probable that PW Transactions represented cash withdrawals in any individual customer case. Accordingly, the Participating Claimants' relevancy objections are overruled.
The Participating Claimants argue that the BLMIS records offered by the Trustee, including BLMIS customer statements (TX 1, TX 4, TX 5, TX 6, TX 9, TX 10, TX 12, TX 22, TX 32, TX 33, TX 81, TX 82, TX 83, TX 97, TX 193, TX 194, TX 195, TX 197, TX 200, TX 201, TX 205, TX 206, TX 209, TX 211, TX 215, TX 216, TX 220, TX 226, TX 227, TX 228, TX 233, TX 235, TX 236, TX 237, TX 238), customer files (TX 19, TX 20, TX 36, TX 37, TX 38, TX 40, TX 41, TX 42, TX 43, TX 44, TX 45, TX 46, TX 47, TX 48, TX 49, TX 191, TX 198, TX 199, TX 204, TX 210, TX 212, TX 213, TX 214, TX 225, TX 231, and TX 232), and all or some portion of other documents (TX 80, TX 89, TX 90, TX 221, TX 222, TX 223, TX 224, TX 217, TX 230 and TX 234), are hearsay and should not be received in evidence.
Under the business records exception, the hearsay rule does not exclude
FED. R. EVID. 803(6). "The business records exception has been construed generously in favor of admissibility, due to the general trustworthiness of regularly kept records and the need for this type of evidence in many cases." Arista Records, 784 F.Supp.2d at 421; accord Conoco Inc. v. Dep't of Energy, 99 F.3d 387, 391 (Fed. Cir. 1996); accord Health Alliance Network, Inc. v. Cont'l Cas. Co., 245 F.R.D. 121, 129 (S.D.N.Y. 2007) ("Rule 803(6) favors the admission of evidence rather than its exclusion if it has any probative value at all."), aff'd, 294 F. App'x 680 (2d Cir. 2008). The principal precondition to the admission of a document under the business records exception is that the records "have a sufficient indicia of trustworthiness to be considered reliable ... [and] [t]he determination of whether, in all the circumstances, the records are sufficiently reliable to warrant their admission in evidence is left to the sound discretion of the trial court." Potamkin Cadillac Corp. v. B.R.I. Coverage Corp., 38 F.3d 627, 632-33 (2d Cir. 1994) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); accord Elsevier B.V. v. UnitedHealth Grp., Inc., 784 F.Supp.2d 286, 292 (S.D.N.Y. 2011). "The custodian need not have personal knowledge of the actual creation of the document to lay a proper foundation." United States v. Komasa, 767 F.3d 151, 156 (2d Cir. 2014) (citation and alteration omitted), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 135 S.Ct. 1579, 191 L.Ed.2d 660 (2015); accord Int'l Mgmt., 781 F.3d at 1268 ("As long as the trustee presented enough circumstantial evidence to establish the trustworthiness of the underlying documents, he did not need to present testimony from the person who actually prepared them; his own testimony would suffice."); Saks Int'l, Inc. v. M/V "Export Champion", 817 F.2d 1011, 1013 (2d Cir. 1987) ("[T]here is no requirement that the person whose first-hand knowledge was the basis of the entry be identified, so long as it was the business entity's regular practice to get information from such a person."); see generally 5 WEINSTEIN § 803.08[04].
The BLMIS records offered by the Trustee, particularly the customer statements, are excepted from hearsay under the business records exception for the reasons explained by the Eleventh Circuit in Int'l Mgmt. In Int'l Mgmt., the Court rejected the defendants' contention that the debtor's records underlying the charts the trustee used to prove his case were hearsay. As custodian of the documents, the trustee testified about his investigation into the provenance of the documents, their reliability, and his interviews with the former employees during which he learned how the documents were created. Furthermore, he reconciled the documents with third-party documents including those obtained from financial institutions. Int'l Mgmt., 781 F.3d at 1267.
Here, the Trustee's experts were qualified to identify the records as BLMIS' records for the reasons stated in connection with their authentication. They were tasked with reconstructing and analyzing them, and the Court has already found BLMIS' records to be trustworthy for the purpose of computing net equity under the Net Investment Method. Furthermore, Ms. Bongiorno and Ms. Sala, the two longest serving BLMIS employees, as well as the other former BLMIS employees who were deposed, had personal knowledge of BLMIS' regular record keeping practices. They explained how BLMIS created the books and records in the ordinary course of its business, including the customer statements and the "S" and "R" notations in the customers' files, and in particular,
Accordingly, the Participating Claimants' hearsay objections and other objections to the admission of the BLMIS books and records are overruled, and they are received in evidence except to the extent a proffered exhibit was withdrawn by the Trustee.
Having determined that in the absence of contrary evidence in an individual case the PW notation supports a finding that it reflects a cash withdrawal, the Court turns to Mr. Blecker's objection to the Trustee's determination valuing the Blecker Claims at zero. Mr. Aaron Blecker, aka Arthur Blecker, both individually and with his wife, Sophie Blecker, as joint tenant, held four different accounts at BLMIS from at least 1978 through December 11, 2008. Over the course of the years, BLMIS changed the numbering systems used to designate the accounts. BLMIS account 100214, a joint account, was opened as early as 1978. In 1983, BLMIS converted many of its account numbers, including 100214, which became 100215. In 1992, BLMIS changed to an alphanumeric numbering system, and account 100215 became account 1B0023
Mr. Blecker filed the Blecker Claims with the Trustee, respectively, for the 156 Account, PCX 15, the 022 Account, PCX 16, and the 157 Account. PCX 61. He did not file a claim for the 023 Account. The claims relating to the 156, 022 and 157 Accounts were in the amounts of $2,625,435.95, $753,107.40 and $1,480,131.54, respectively. The Trustee denied the claims on the ground that the withdrawals exceeded the deposits. PCX 17 (022 Account); PCX 20 (156 Account); PCX 21 (157 Account).
It is undisputed that Mr. Blecker deposited the aggregate amount of $577,350.33 into the 022 and 023 Accounts. The basis of the Trustee's objection to the Blecker Claims relates to the numerous PW Transactions that appeared in the customer statements for those accounts and exceeded the total deposits. The 156 and 157 Accounts were funded exclusively through inter-account transfers originating with the 022 and 023 Accounts, which, the Trustee argues, were "dry" by the time of the inter-account transfers. As no fresh funds
Mr. Greenblatt testified at great length regarding his analysis of the 022 Account and summarized the transactions in a Principal Balance Calculation, TX 86, based on BLMIS' books and records, including the monthly account statements. Tr. 186:23-194:9; see also PCX 17. The 022 Account was opened in September 1986 with two deposits aggregating $100,000, and increased in December 1992 with an additional $100,000 deposit. The customer statements between November 1986 and April 1997 listed seventy-five PW Transactions,
Mr. Greenblatt engaged in a similar analysis for the 023 Account and summarized his analysis in the Principal Balance Calculation for that account in TX 91. Tr. 202:14-204:21. This account was funded with several deposits and one inter-account transfer aggregating $377,350. TX 91, at 1, 2; PCX 23, at Bates No. MWPTAP00000349. The customer statements reflect that the Bleckers received nine checks between April 16, 1981 and June 18, 1982 in the total amount of $13,295. TX 91, at 1. These were not PW Transactions. In addition, the account statements listed 105 PW Transactions between August 1982 and April 1997.
Mr. Greenblatt also testified regarding his analysis of the 157 Account, and his Principal Balance Calculation is set forth in TX 93. Tr. 206:5-23; accord PCX 21, at Bates No. MWPTAP00995997. According to the customer statements, the account was funded with a single inter-account transfer from the 023 Account in the sum of $389,847, but by then, the 023 Account was substantially overdrawn and the principal amount transferred was zero under the Inter-Account Method. Moreover, BLMIS purported to transfer the entire equity to the 156 Account in June and September 1997, reported as approximately $1.46 million, TX 93, so nothing was left in that account even under Mr. Blecker's theory of the case. Hence, the net equity claim was zero as reflected in the Trustee's determination letter on this basis alone. See PCX 21.
Lastly, Mr. Greenblatt analyzed the 156 Account in the same manner as the other accounts, and TX 92 reflects his Principal Balance Calculation. Tr. 204:22-206:4. According to the customer statements, the 156 Account was initially funded with an inter-account transfer from the 022 Account in the sum of $206,529, but there was no net equity in the 022 Account at the time so the actual transfer was zero under the Inter-Account Method. The aggregate amount of approximately $1.46 million was thereafter transferred from the 157 Account, but the amount of that transfer under the Inter-Account Method was also zero. See TX 92. As there were no other deposits into the account, the Trustee denied the claim. PCX 20.
Mr. Blecker admitted that he reviewed his monthly customer statements and saw the PW Transactions, and thought they represented checks sent to the companies identified after the PW notation for the purchase of securities. Deposition of Aaron Blecker, held July 1, 2014 ("Blecker Tr.") at 10:19-11:16; PCX 68 at ¶ 10.
The Customer Agreements signed by Mr. Blecker set a ten-day deadline for objecting to the transactions listed in the customer statements:
Modern Settings, Inc. v. Prudential-Bache Sec., Inc., 936 F.2d 640, 645-46 (2d Cir. 1991); accord DBL Liquidating Tr. v. Clarkson Constr. Co. (In re Drexel Burnham Lambert Grp., Inc.), 157 B.R. 539, 543-44 (S.D.N.Y. 1993) (Pollack, J.).
Mr. Blecker was a successful CPA, Tr. 31:14-22, and understood the difference between a debit and a credit. Whether the PW Transactions reflected payments to the Bleckers as the Trustee's proof implies, or checks sent to the seller or issuer of the identified security as Blecker believed, they still reduced the balances in the accounts, and aggregated far more than the deposits. There is no evidence that the Bleckers ever protested the transactions depicted in the monthly statements, and specifically, the reductions in the balances resulting from the PW Transactions. Having failed to object to the customer statements, Mr. Blecker is now barred from contesting that the PW Transactions reduced the balances in his accounts. Pitheckoff v. SIPC (In re Great E. Sec., Inc.), No. 10 Civ. 8647(CM), 2011 WL 1345152, at *6 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 5, 2011) ("Where the agreement with the broker-dealer requires the customer to object in writing, within a specified period of time, failure to do so may suffice to ratify an unauthorized trade."); In re Klein, Maus & Shire, Inc., 301 B.R. 408, 419-20 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2003) (denying investors' claim of unauthorized trading as ground for customer claim under SIPA based on investors' failure to timely complain of trading as required by the customer agreement).
Even if Mr. Blecker had not ratified the PW Transactions, he failed to sustain his burden of proving the amount of the Blecker Claims. "SIPA places the burden of proof to establish customer status on the claimant by requiring that a debtor's obligations to its customers be `ascertainable from the books and records of the debtor' or `otherwise established to the satisfaction of the trustee.'" Pitheckoff, 2011 WL 1345152, at *4 (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 78fff-2(b)); accord In re A.R. Baron Co., Inc., 226 B.R. 790, 795 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 1998) ("Provisions of SIPA make clear a claimant's burden by requiring that a debtor's obligations to its customers be `ascertainable from the books and records of the debtor,' or `otherwise established to the satisfaction of the trustee.'") (quoting SIPA § 78fff-2(b)). It is not disputed that he individually, and together with his wife as joint tenants, were customers of BLMIS; the dispute relates to the amount of Blecker Claims. He has failed to prove that any of the accounts had positive net equity.
Mr. Blecker did not offer any evidence of his own to establish the amount of the Blecker Claims. With the help of the Trustee's experts, he was able to show that the deposits into the Blecker Accounts totaled $577,350. However, the reconciliations in
But even if he shifted the burden of going forward to the Trustee, the Trustee rebutted Mr. Blecker's prima facie case and shifted the ultimate burden of persuasion back to Mr. Blecker which he then failed to carry. Although the Trustee could not corroborate any of the PW Transactions in the Blecker Accounts as payments to the Bleckers as he could in nearly 100% of the PW Transactions during the Ten-Year Period, see PCX 8, at ECF pp. 11-19 of 19, the lack of corroboration was due to the absence of older bank records and not because of evidence contradicting the opinions of the Trustee's experts. These opinions still support the inference that absent contradictory evidence, a PW Transaction represented a cash withdrawal. Furthermore, Mr. Greenblatt's reconstruction of the Blecker Accounts based on the monthly statements summarized in the Principal Balance Calculations demonstrated that there was no net equity in the Blecker Accounts by the end of April 1997. In simplest terms, the Bleckers overdrew the 022 Account by $59,634, the 023 Account by $466,527, and following the inter-account transfers, never deposited any principal into the 156 and 157 Accounts. Mr. Blecker was aware of the PW Transactions debited to the Blecker Accounts, but thought they represented checks sent to the identified corporation. But whether they were checks sent to the corporation or checks sent to Blecker, they were still debits or cash outflows. By the end of April 1997, those debits in the Blecker Accounts exceeded the credits by a substantial amount.
Mr. Blecker objects to the admission under Fed. R. Evid. 1006
He also supplied the necessary foundation testimony. "A summary must of course be based on foundation testimony connecting it with the underlying evidence summarized." Fagiola v. Nat'l Gypsum & Co., 906 F.2d 53, 57 (2d Cir. 1990). Mr. Greenblatt testified on cross-examination
The balance of Mr. Blecker's objection to the receipt of the admission of the Principal Balance Calculations lacks merit. A summary may be admitted as a convenient means to prove the contents of voluminous documents provided the original or duplicates of the underlying evidence are available for inspection and copying and are admissible in evidence, 6 WEINSTEIN § 1006.06[1], [3], but the documents underlying the summary do not have to be introduced into evidence.
The relevant customer statements were voluminous. They spanned twenty-six years (1982-2008) and involved 180 separate PW Transactions. Furthermore, the underlying monthly statements are admissible under the business records exception for the reasons discussed above, and it was unnecessary to introduce them into evidence although some have been received.
Finally, the data underlying the Principal Balance Calculations — the customer statements — were available for inspection and copying in the Trustee's data room. The Principal Balance Calculations showed that there were no gaps in the statements and included the Bates numbers for every customer statement that Mr. Greenblatt reviewed. In addition, Ms. Collura tracked 180 PW Transactions in the Blecker's accounts, and identified them by date, amount and description. PCX 8, at ECF pp. 11-19 or 19. According to her footnotes, this information came directly from the Bleckers' monthly customer statements. Obviously, Mr. Greenblatt and Ms. Collura reviewed all of the Bleckers' monthly statements to identify the universe of PW Transactions and to prepare the Principal Balance Calculations and PCX 8.
In a post-trial submission, Mr. Blecker's counsel contends that the Trustee did not make all of the monthly statements available, and purports to offer proof. She sent paralegals into the Trustee's data room after the trial, and, she claims, they could not find all of the monthly statements. Chaitman Declaration ¶¶ 9-16. Aside from
In addition, it strains credulity that the Trustee's data room contained some but not all of Mr. Blecker's customer statements when the Principal Balance Calculations identified them all by Bates number. Assuming that the paralegals really couldn't find the statements, it doesn't mean they weren't there. The more plausible explanation is that they didn't look hard enough or needed help. The paralegals could have located all the statements by using the Bates numbers or by asking the Trustee for help.
Mr. Blecker also complains that the Principal Balance Calculation regarding the 023 Account included a $35,000 inter-account transfer on February 18, 1983 from an "A & A" account, and "as far as" his counsel knows, the Trustee never produced the data for that account. Chaitman Declaration ¶ 15.
Based on Mr. Greenblatt's testimony and his Principal Balance Calculations, I find that it does.
Other BLMIS records and former employee testimony support the Trustee's conclusion that the PW Transactions in the Blecker Accounts represented checks paid to the Bleckers. BLMIS' internal records listed Mr. Blecker's accounts as "S" accounts signifying that the PW Transaction checks would be sent to Mr. Blecker automatically, and there was no need for Mr. Blecker to request written withdrawals. During her deposition, Ms. Bongiorno was shown the Name/ADDR File Maintenance form relating to the 023 Account. The exhibit, Bates No. MADTBB01988421-24, was marked as Exhibit 42 at her deposition and as TX 210 at trial. The columns headed "Profits," "Dividends" and "Interest" each bore the notation "S," meaning that profits, interest and dividends generated in the account would be sent automatically to Mr. Blecker without further request. Ms. Bongiorno identified the handwriting of the "S" notations as her own, and explained that in the ordinary course of BLMIS' business, the "S" treatment would have been agreed to verbally between Mr. Blecker and Madoff, no letter would have been required and the profits would be sent automatically. Bongiorno Tr. 104:3-107:2.
Similarly, Ms. Bongiorno was shown the Name/ADDR File Maintenance pertaining to the 022 Account. This exhibit, Bates No. MADTBB01988418-20, was marked as Exhibit 36 at her deposition and as TX 204 at trial. This exhibit contained a single, handwritten "S" notation to the right of the "Profits," "Dividend" and "Interest" columns, which Ms. Bongiorno testified was written by Jodi Crupi, another BLMIS employee. Bongiorno Tr. 86:22-87:10, 221:17-21. She further testified that it would have been set up in the same way as the 023 Account, and profits would have been sent automatically to the Bleckers. Bongiorno Tr. 87:11-88:17; accord Deposition of Bernard L. Madoff, held June 15, 2016 ("Madoff Tr.") 102:15-23.
Furthermore, Ms. Bongiorno confirmed that certain PW Transactions reflected on the Blecker Accounts' monthly statements matched several corresponding entries in the "cash out" Spiral Notebooks. For example, Mr. Blecker's July 1991 customer statement for the 022 Account, TX 209, reported a PW Transaction on July 11, 1991 in the amount of $3,230.02 related to profits on a deal involving Health South securities, but this transaction was canceled on July 17, 1991. That same day, a check, coded "PW," was re-issued to Mr. Blecker in the same amount. The re-issued check was reported in the Spiral Notebooks with corresponding information as to the date, accountholder, amount, and related security. TX 229, at Bates No. HWN0001651; Bongiorno Tr. 90:22-95:7. The Spiral Notebooks also listed a PW
Finally, the Spiral Notebooks reported PW checks sent to Mr. Blecker in the amount of $12,364.06 on June 17, 1991, relating to Health South, TX 229, at Bates No. HWN0001651, and another PW check in the amount of $1,375.28 relating to Liberty National Bancorp. Id., at Bates No. HWN0001655. The parties did not offer the June 1991 customer statement for the 023 Account into evidence, but Ms. Collura's supplemental report confirmed that both checks appeared as PW Transactions in that customer statement. PCX 8, at ECF pp. 17 of 19 & nn. 1 & 2.
Mr. Blecker testified that he never withdrew any funds from the Blecker Accounts because they were such a "good investment." Blecker Tr. 6:5-7:11.
All of the PW Transactions occurred in the 022 and 023 Accounts, both of which were closed in April 1997 through inter-account transfers to the 156 Account and the 157 Account, respectively.
Similarly, Mr. Blecker deposited $377,350 into the 023 Account between March 1981 and October 1990, all but
If Mr. Becker didn't receive the PW Transaction checks, it is difficult to understand why he viewed these meager returns as a "good investment" and a "wonderful investment" earning high returns that pleased him so. The only way this makes sense is if he received the high returns in the form of the PW checks.
In addition, his testimony and statements that he thought the PW Transactions were checks issued to the identified corporation for the purchase of its securities is belied by the monthly statements which did not show that he held the stock he was supposedly purchasing with the PW checks. Mr. Greenblatt provided an example. Mr. Blecker's February 1995 statement, TX 82, showed a purchase of 2,484 shares of "Aluminum Company of America" for $202,446 and listed the 2,484 shares in the holdings section of the statement. The March 1995 statement, TX 81, showed that following a two-for-one stock split, the shares are purportedly sold for $205,203, resulting in a profit of $2,784. Eight days later, the amount of the purported profit, $2,784, was listed as a PW Transaction on the March 1995 customer statement in the column "Amount Debited to Your Account." The securities for Aluminum Company of America no longer appeared in the holdings section on the month-end March 1995 statement, and did not appear on the April 1995 statement, TX 83. Tr. 182:9-186:22. Other account statements also show that the Blecker Accounts did not own the corresponding security after a PW Transaction relating to that security. See, e.g., TX 82 (showing PW "Check Pacific" debited on February 7, 1995 but no corresponding "Pacific" security held in the account); TX 97 (showing sale of Philip Morris stock on April 16, 1997 and PW "Check Philip Morris" debited on April 29, 1997); TX 205 (showing PW "Check Fleet Norstar" on April 28, 1992 but no corresponding holding at the end of the month); TX 206 (showing a PW "Check Pep Boys" debited on June 16, 1992 but no corresponding purchase or holding of Pep Boys securities after the debit); TX 209 (showing PW "Check Health South" debit on July 17, 1991 and no corresponding purchase or holding); TX 211 (same).
The Court finds that the PW Transactions listed in a customer's monthly statement supports the finding, absent credible contrary evidence, that a check in that amount was sent to the customer and constitutes a cash withdrawal under the Net Investment Method. As concerns the Blecker Accounts, the Court finds that Mr. Blecker ratified the treatment of PW Transactions as debits to the Blecker Accounts, and in addition, the PW Transactions represent cash withdrawals from the
So ordered.