Madoff Arrest Sends Shockwaves Through Jewish Philanthropy
      
		
        By Gabrielle Birkner and Anthony Weiss
		Forward
Fri. Dec 12, 2008
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The arrest of Wall Street trader Bernard L. Madoff, who federal 
		agents say defrauded investors of an estimated $50 billion, has had 
		immediate consequences in the Jewish philanthropic world. One charity 
		already closed and insiders are worried that the ramifications of 
		Madoff's financial demise may extend to the many organizations he 
		supported and the wealthy Jews he advised.
 
On Friday, Madoff 
		resigned from Yeshiva University, where he served as the chairman of the 
		Sy Syms School of Business and treasurer of the board of trustees. 
		Madoff and his wife, Ruth, had also endowed a "Presidential Fellowship" 
		at the university.
 
In a statement, a YU spokeswoman, Hedy 
		Shulman, said that news of Madoff's arrest had "shocked" university 
		officials, adding: "Our lawyers and accountants are investigating all 
		aspects of his relationship to Yeshiva University. We reserve our 
		comments until we complete our investigation."
 
The same day, the 
		Boston-based Robert I. Lappin Charitable Foundation, which had the bulk 
		of its money invested with Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, 
		closed its doors and terminated its seven staff members. A 16-year-old 
		charity, the organization's stated goal had been "reversing the trend of 
		assimilation and intermarriage."
 
It had funded teen trips to 
		Israel, enrichment programs for Jewish educators, and interfaith 
		outreach initiatives. According to a press release issued Friday by the 
		foundation, all of its assets had been frozen by the federal courts. 
		"The money needed to fund the programs of the Lappin Foundation is 
		gone," the statement read.
 
"It's with a heavy heart that I make 
		this announcement," the organization's trustee, Robert I. Lappin, said. 
		"The Foundation's programs have touched thousands of lives over many 
		years in our efforts to help keep our children Jewish."
 
Madoff 
		also made charitable donations to other Jewish organizations, including 
		the 92nd Street Y, where he and his wife were listed as "Benefactors" - 
		having given a gift of between $2,500 and $4,999 to the
2006-2007 
		annual campaign.
 
He had also chaired a gala fundraiser on behalf 
		of Gift of Life, a Jewish bone marrow registry and cord blood bank.
 
		In addition, the Madoffs were such significant contributors to 
		UJA-Federation of New York that the charity placed a death notice in the 
		New York Times, extending sympathies to the Madoff family following the 
		death of a family member. The notice mentioned Bernard Madoff, and 
		referred to the family as "cherished friends and leaders whose deep 
		commitment to the New York Jewish community profoundly impacts millions 
		of lives."
 
The investor was close to a number of prominent 
		Jewish donors, both on Wall Street and elsewhere. The Wall Street 
		Journal reported that members of the Boca Rio Golf Club in Boca Raton 
		and the Palm Beach Country Club in Palm Beach were heavily invested with 
		Madoff's firm. Both clubs are heavily Jewish.
 
Madoff, 70, was 
		arrested on Thursday and released on a $10 million bond. A lawyer for 
		Madoff told the Wall Street Journal: "Bernard Madoff is a longstanding 
		leader in the financial-services industry with an unblemished record. He 
		is a person of integrity. He intends to fight to get through this 
		unfortunate event."
		
		http://www.forward.com/articles/14725/
 
      
      
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