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Madoff's beach home sells for about $8.75M

Unidentified buyer or buyers buys Long Island house of convicted swindler

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Image: Madoff's Palm Beach home
  Inside Madoff's homes
Bernard Madoff’s Manhattan penthouse, Long Island getaway and Florida estate are for sale in the hopes of raising tens of millions of dollars to help reimburse victims of his Ponzi scheme.

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  Madoff's Montauk Home Sold
Bernie Madoff's Long Island beach home, which was listed for $8.75 million, was sold, reports CNBC's Scott Cohn.

CNBC

updated 7:36 p.m. ET Sept. 17, 2009

NEW YORK - It boasts ocean views, an infamous former owner — and now a buyer willing to pay more than $8.75 million.

An unidentified would-be buyer or buyers snapped up Bernard Madoff’s Long Island beach house within days after the U.S. Marshals Service put the seized property up for sale, a spokeswoman for the broker the Corcoran Group said Thursday.

Spokeswoman Anne Lacombe said the fallen money manager’s Montauk retreat was under contract for more than its $8.75 million asking price. She didn’t have the exact figure, any information on the intended buyer or the closing date.

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U.S. Marshal Joseph R. Guccione said in a statement the potential buyer’s identity and price were being kept private to protect a deal that has yet to close.

The Marshals Service put the 3,000-square-foot house on the market Sept. 1 to help repay victims of Madoff’s massive investment fraud.

The listing attracted an onslaught of responses and numerous bids, Lacombe said. She said the highest bid was taken.

Madoff’s notoriety “made it come to a lot of people’s attention, but it’s really all about the location of the views and the home,” she said.

The four-bedroom house is set on a 1.2-acre lot amid the dunes in Montauk, a windswept beach community east of the Hamptons. The house is modest by Hamptons standards, but it boasts stunning views of the Atlantic Ocean and sits closer to the surf than zoning laws now allow.

“These kind of properties are very rare,” Lacombe said.

Madoff, 71, was sentenced in June to 150 years in prison for orchestrating a Ponzi scheme that encompassed thousands of investors and billions of dollars.

His punishment included a forfeiture order that stripped him and his wife, Ruth, of nearly all their wealth. The order gave the marshals authority to seize and sell the Madoffs’ homes.

Their five-bedroom waterfront mansion in Palm Beach, Fla., remains on the market for $8.5 million, Lacombe said.

Their Manhattan penthouse, listed at $9.9 million, has drawn several seriously interested potential buyers, said Anne Corey, the Sotheby’s International Realty broker representing that property.

Meanwhile, security has been tightened at the Montauk home after the theft of a $300 sculpture off the front porch late last week, Newsday reported. The East Hampton Town police didn’t immediately return a telephone call about the theft Thursday.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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