Madoff was prosecuted by the Office of the US Attorney in Manhattan, and 10 or more people associated with him could face criminal charges in the coming months. -- PHOTO: AP
NEW YORK - US INVESTIGATORS say 10 or more people associated with imprisoned swindler Bernard Madoff could face criminal charges in the coming months, a law enforcement source said on Tuesday.
Agencies will scoop as many people and prosecute
"What will happen from now is the juggernaut of the federal government and many other agencies are going to roll forward and scoop up as many people as they can and prosecute them," said Mr Anthony Sabino, professor of law and business at St. John's University in New York.
Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC had about 200 employees in a brokerage unit and an investment advisory business. The court-appointed trustee winding down the firm said the criminal activity took place in the investment arm.
The source, who asked not be identified because of the continuing investigation into the multibillion-dollar Madoff fraud, said the FBI was "closer to the beginning than the end" of the probe.
Disgraced financier Madoff, 71, was handed a 150-year prison sentence Monday. He was arrested in December and pleaded guilty in March to orchestrating Wall Street's biggest investment fraud of as much as $65 billion.
He has not named accomplices in his classic "cash in, cash out" Ponzi scheme. The only other person charged criminally so far is his outside accountant, Mr David Friehling.
"There will probably be more people charged," the law enforcement source said. "It is likely to be 10 or more, but it is going to be a lengthy process that could take months or more."
Madoff was prosecuted by the Office of the US Attorney in Manhattan, which declined comment on its continuing investigation.
In pre-sentencing court papers, prosecutors said Madoff organised and led the fraud and had numerous clerical employees working in the business.
"It would not have been possible to execute his scheme without their assistance," prosecutors said.
Federal investigators have declined to identify who is the focus of their inquiries, but they are skeptical of claims by some people who worked at the Madoff firm that they had no knowledge of a fraud spanning decades, the law enforcement source said.
White-collar crime experts have said from the start that Madoff's scheme appeared to be too complex to carry out alone. -- REUTERS