<p>Bernard Madoff, who was convicted for running the largest known Ponzi scheme in history, died on Wednesday in federal prison where he was serving a 150-year sentence, the Bureau of Prisons said. He was 82.</p>.<p>Madoff had been suffering from chronic kidney failure and several other medical ailments.</p>.<p>He had been held at a federal prison in Butner, North Carolina, after being sentenced in June 2009 to a 150-year term for engineering a fraud estimated as high as $64.8 billion.</p>.<p>Madoff's thousands of victims, large and small, included individuals, charities, pension funds and hedge funds.</p>.<p>Among those he betrayed were the actors Kevin Bacon, Kyra Sedgwick and John Malkovich; baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Sandy Koufax; and a charity associated with director Steven Spielberg.</p>.<p>Owners of the New York Mets, longtime Madoff clients, struggled for years to field a good baseball team because of losses they suffered.</p>.<p>"We thought he was God. We trusted everything in his hands," Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel, whose foundation lost $15.2 million, said in 2009.</p>.<p>Some victims lost everything. Many came from the Jewish community, where Madoff had been a major philanthropist.</p>.<p>Madoff's crimes were revealed to authorities in 2008 by his two sons, who were not part of the scheme.</p>.<p>The fraud exposed holes at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which through incompetence or neglect botched a half-dozen examinations.</p>.<p>"There were several times that I met with the SEC and thought, 'They got me,'" Madoff told lawyers in a prison interview, according to ABC News.</p>.<p>Madoff had been the largest market-maker on the Nasdaq, once serving as its non-executive chairman.</p>.<p>His brokerage firm was located in a Midtown Manhattan tower known as the Lipstick Building.</p>.<p>Employees there said they felt like part of Madoff's family. They did not know he was running his fraud on a different floor. Only a trusted few did.</p>.<p>In a typical Ponzi scheme, money from newer investors is used to pay sums owed to earlier investors.</p>.<p>Madoff said his fraud began in the early 1990s, but prosecutors and many victims believe it started earlier.</p>.<p>Investors were entranced by the steady, double-digit annual gains that Madoff seemed to generate, and which others found impossible to explain or duplicate.</p>.<p>The money helped Madoff and his wife, Ruth, enjoy luxuries such as a Manhattan penthouse, a French villa and expensive cars and yachts, with a combined net worth of about $825 million.</p>.<p>But no one from Madoff's immediate family was in the Manhattan courtroom when U.S. District Judge Denny Chin sentenced him.</p>.<p>And no family, friends or supporters submitted letters attesting to his good character or deeds in support of leniency.</p>.<p>"I believed when I started this problem, this crime, that it would be something I would be able to work my way out of, but that became impossible," Madoff told the court. "As hard as I tried, the deeper I dug myself into a hole."</p>.<p>Madoff also addressed victims in attendance, saying, "I am sorry. I know that doesn't help you."</p>.<p><strong>Keeping up appearances</strong></p>.<p>Bernard Lawrence Madoff was born on April 29, 1938, in the New York City borough of Queens and grew up there as the son of European immigrants who ran a brokerage out of their house.</p>.<p>Madoff graduated from Hofstra University in 1960 and briefly attended Brooklyn Law School before quitting.</p>.<p>That same year, he started Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, using his $500 in savings and office space borrowed from his father-in-law, Madoff told New York magazine in 2011.</p>.<p>Madoff started small, selling penny stocks in the over-the-counter market. By the early 1970s, he had become one of the five original broker-dealers in the Nasdaq trading system.</p>.<p>Madoff advocated for greater market competition, at a time the New York Stock Exchange still dominated trading, and became an early force in electronic trading.</p>.<p>At times friendly and charming, and at others aloof, Madoff had a penchant for neatness that some viewed as an obsession.</p>.<p>Madoff's offices were decorated in black and shades of gray, with little paperwork or objects visible on employee desks, and he coordinated several wedding rings with his wristwatches.</p>.<p>Market-making served Madoff well in the 1980s and 1990s, when he and his rivals could profit from buying a stock at $5 and selling it for $5.125, for example.</p>.<p>Profitability declined once decimalization became standard, but Madoff's brokerage operation provided financial support for his fraud.</p>.<p>Clients were told they would make money through a "split-strike conversion strategy," in which Madoff would buy a basket of large stocks to mirror the Standard & Poor's 100 index, and reduce risk by purchasing and selling options on that index.</p>.<p>Madoff looked successful, and customers were happy.</p>.<p>But it wasn't real.</p>.<p>Prosecutors said Madoff and his staff sent clients fake confirmations for trades he never executed, and fake account statements to document gains he never made.</p>.<p>Madoff admitted to sometimes dipping into his account at JPMorgan Chase to pay customers who wanted their money back.</p>
<p>Bernard Madoff, who was convicted for running the largest known Ponzi scheme in history, died on Wednesday in federal prison where he was serving a 150-year sentence, the Bureau of Prisons said. He was 82.</p>.<p>Madoff had been suffering from chronic kidney failure and several other medical ailments.</p>.<p>He had been held at a federal prison in Butner, North Carolina, after being sentenced in June 2009 to a 150-year term for engineering a fraud estimated as high as $64.8 billion.</p>.<p>Madoff's thousands of victims, large and small, included individuals, charities, pension funds and hedge funds.</p>.<p>Among those he betrayed were the actors Kevin Bacon, Kyra Sedgwick and John Malkovich; baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Sandy Koufax; and a charity associated with director Steven Spielberg.</p>.<p>Owners of the New York Mets, longtime Madoff clients, struggled for years to field a good baseball team because of losses they suffered.</p>.<p>"We thought he was God. We trusted everything in his hands," Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel, whose foundation lost $15.2 million, said in 2009.</p>.<p>Some victims lost everything. Many came from the Jewish community, where Madoff had been a major philanthropist.</p>.<p>Madoff's crimes were revealed to authorities in 2008 by his two sons, who were not part of the scheme.</p>.<p>The fraud exposed holes at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which through incompetence or neglect botched a half-dozen examinations.</p>.<p>"There were several times that I met with the SEC and thought, 'They got me,'" Madoff told lawyers in a prison interview, according to ABC News.</p>.<p>Madoff had been the largest market-maker on the Nasdaq, once serving as its non-executive chairman.</p>.<p>His brokerage firm was located in a Midtown Manhattan tower known as the Lipstick Building.</p>.<p>Employees there said they felt like part of Madoff's family. They did not know he was running his fraud on a different floor. Only a trusted few did.</p>.<p>In a typical Ponzi scheme, money from newer investors is used to pay sums owed to earlier investors.</p>.<p>Madoff said his fraud began in the early 1990s, but prosecutors and many victims believe it started earlier.</p>.<p>Investors were entranced by the steady, double-digit annual gains that Madoff seemed to generate, and which others found impossible to explain or duplicate.</p>.<p>The money helped Madoff and his wife, Ruth, enjoy luxuries such as a Manhattan penthouse, a French villa and expensive cars and yachts, with a combined net worth of about $825 million.</p>.<p>But no one from Madoff's immediate family was in the Manhattan courtroom when U.S. District Judge Denny Chin sentenced him.</p>.<p>And no family, friends or supporters submitted letters attesting to his good character or deeds in support of leniency.</p>.<p>"I believed when I started this problem, this crime, that it would be something I would be able to work my way out of, but that became impossible," Madoff told the court. "As hard as I tried, the deeper I dug myself into a hole."</p>.<p>Madoff also addressed victims in attendance, saying, "I am sorry. I know that doesn't help you."</p>.<p><strong>Keeping up appearances</strong></p>.<p>Bernard Lawrence Madoff was born on April 29, 1938, in the New York City borough of Queens and grew up there as the son of European immigrants who ran a brokerage out of their house.</p>.<p>Madoff graduated from Hofstra University in 1960 and briefly attended Brooklyn Law School before quitting.</p>.<p>That same year, he started Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities, using his $500 in savings and office space borrowed from his father-in-law, Madoff told New York magazine in 2011.</p>.<p>Madoff started small, selling penny stocks in the over-the-counter market. By the early 1970s, he had become one of the five original broker-dealers in the Nasdaq trading system.</p>.<p>Madoff advocated for greater market competition, at a time the New York Stock Exchange still dominated trading, and became an early force in electronic trading.</p>.<p>At times friendly and charming, and at others aloof, Madoff had a penchant for neatness that some viewed as an obsession.</p>.<p>Madoff's offices were decorated in black and shades of gray, with little paperwork or objects visible on employee desks, and he coordinated several wedding rings with his wristwatches.</p>.<p>Market-making served Madoff well in the 1980s and 1990s, when he and his rivals could profit from buying a stock at $5 and selling it for $5.125, for example.</p>.<p>Profitability declined once decimalization became standard, but Madoff's brokerage operation provided financial support for his fraud.</p>.<p>Clients were told they would make money through a "split-strike conversion strategy," in which Madoff would buy a basket of large stocks to mirror the Standard & Poor's 100 index, and reduce risk by purchasing and selling options on that index.</p>.<p>Madoff looked successful, and customers were happy.</p>.<p>But it wasn't real.</p>.<p>Prosecutors said Madoff and his staff sent clients fake confirmations for trades he never executed, and fake account statements to document gains he never made.</p>.<p>Madoff admitted to sometimes dipping into his account at JPMorgan Chase to pay customers who wanted their money back.</p>