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Ruth Madoff will now face husband’s victims

She may claim $69 million is her own money, untainted by Ponzi scheme

Image: Madoff apartment
Brian Mcdermott / AP
Bernard Madoff and his lawyers are also claiming that the Manhattan apartment and an additional $62 million in bonds and cash can be kept from investors because they are in Ruth Madoff's name and unrelated to the fraud.
Video: Madoff goes to jail
Madoff files appeal
March 13: After pleading guilty to running the largest financial scam in history, Bernard Madoff's lawyers appeal the judges decision to revoke his $10 million bail. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

updated 8:06 p.m. ET March 12, 2009

NEW YORK - If Ruth Madoff hopes to hold onto her fancy apartment, her millions in cash and her jetsetting lifestyle while her husband is in prison, experts have some advice for her: Get ready for an inquisition.

Attorneys and investment specialists say Madoff will have a difficult time proving her assertion that up to $69 million of the couple's wealth was unrelated to her husband's Ponzi scheme.

"It's going to be very hard for her to show that anything is untainted," said Alton Abramowitz, national vice president of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers.

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Some angry investors suspect their money ended up in Ruth Madoff's hands. At the court hearing where her husband pleaded guilty Thursday, the mere mention of her name drew jeers and laughter.

The couple met at their Queens high school and married in 1959, the year after she graduated. She was blonde and pert and devoted, and some investors have said their long marriage lent an air of stability to Madoff and his fund.

But even if she is never charged with a crime, Ruth Madoff's wealth will be closely reviewed by federal prosecutors and civil lawyers.

Investigators will want to see personal bank statements, credit card receipts, tax returns and canceled checks, as well as her business records.

"The process gives us the right to look at all of it to try to prove that Mrs. Madoff did not earn this money on her own," said Jeffrey Sonn, a securities specialist in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., representing dozens of Madoff claimants. "It's intrusive, sure, but that's the procedure."

What those credit-card receipts will show is a life apparently unbound by care, with homes in Palm Beach, Fla., the south of France and the tip of Long Island, besides the $7 million penthouse in midtown Manhattan. There was also travel by private jet and yacht.

At Thursday's court hearing, loud laughter erupted among some of the more than 100 spectators when Bernard Madoff's defense lawyer described the conditions of his client's house arrest and how Madoff had, "at his wife's own expense," paid for private security at their Manhattan home.

There was more snickering when the attorney mentioned that, at the initial bail hearing, he had accounted for Madoff's vast assets including his wife's "small residence in France."

As a young couple, the Madoffs set up a financial-services firm in 1960 on a few thousand dollars Madoff had saved from lifeguarding and installing sprinklers.

Ruth Madoff worked beside her husband at the start and reportedly still had an office near his when the end came last December.

Over the years, Bernard Madoff's financial acumen became legendary, and friends and acquaintances begged him to take their money. The couple also raised two boys — Mark, now 44, and Andrew, 42 — who are both now talking to investigators.

Ruth Madoff, now 67, became co-trustee of the family foundation, earned a master's degree in nutrition and helped compile a cookbook, "The Great Chefs of America Cook Kosher," still available on Amazon.com.

Now the couple's life of privilege is endangered by both the criminal and civil cases.

First, the federal judge overseeing Bernard Madoff's case is likely to rule that he must forfeit some large sum, to be determined by an ongoing investigation that's looking at all family members.

Madoff has already given up the rights to his investment business, his company's prized artwork and some entertainment tickets, and about a dozen checks have already gone out to victims of the Ponzi scheme.


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