Madoff, Richard Behar
Madoff, Richard Behar
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Madoff
The Final Word

Author: Richard Behar

Narrator: Michael David Axtell, Bernie Madoff

Unabridged: 13 hr 58 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/09/2024


Synopsis

Renowned investigative journalist Richard Behar delivers the definitive account of history’s largest—and longest-running—financial fraud, “the scale of the deception…beggars belief” (New York Post).

Some $68 billion evaporated during Bernie Madoff’s epic confidence game. Two people were driven to suicide in the wake of the Ponzi Scheme’s exposure. Others went to prison. But there has never been a satisfying accounting for how Bernie got away with so much, for so long. Until now.

Richard Behar’s relationship with Madoff began in 2011 with a simple email request from the conman. By the time Madoff died in 2021, he had sent Behar more than 300 emails and dozens of handwritten letters, participated in some fifty phone conversations, and sat for three in-person jailhouse interviews—a level of access provided to no other reporter. Behar also established relationships with hundreds of regulators, prosecutors, FBI agents, investors, Wall Street experts, ex-employees of Madoff’s, family members, school classmates, and others.

The result is the final word on the criminal behind history’s most enduring fraud—and on those who believed him, covered for him, or locked him up. Behar illuminates not only the fraud’s origins—decades earlier than Madoff claimed in his confession—but also the complicity of investors, Wall Street insiders, family members, and some of the largest banks in the US and Europe.

Shocking, infuriating, riveting (and at times absurdly funny), Madoff shows us how Bernie ensnared thousands of investors. As Behar’s dogged reporting over the last fifteen years makes clear, however, there aren’t many innocents left standing by the end of this tale. Just about everyone involved is guilty, at a minimum, of humanity’s most consistent weakness: greed.

About Richard Behar

Richard Behar is a contributing editor for Forbes, and an associate producer and narrator of an upcoming docuseries on organized crime in the former Soviet Union. He previously worked on the staffs of Fortune and Time, and carried out probes for Fast Company, CNN, and BBC. In 1998, he conducted the only prison interview of Dennis Helliwell, who ran the longest-known Ponzi scheme prior to Madoff’s arrest. In 2005, Behar launched Project Klebnikov, a global media alliance committed to shedding light on the Moscow murder of his friend and colleague, Forbes editor Paul Klebnikov. Over a four-decade career, Behar has garnered more than twenty journalism awards. Madoff: The Final Word is his first book.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Lily on May 21, 2024

Could literally not tell you why I read this book but I learned a lot......more

Goodreads review by Roy on June 13, 2024

The book is good. It could be better. I felt like I was sitting at the bar with the guy listening to the story over beers, definitely a good yarn here. It needs editing. Stop reminding me what 703 is. I'm three quarters of the way through the book and you're exhausting me with the reminders. Give me......more

Goodreads review by Caroline on July 19, 2024

It’s hard to believe Behar spent a decade on this book. With the great lineup of interviews he conducted, this should have been good. I was really looking forward to this read but was pretty disappointed.......more

Goodreads review by Gus on July 13, 2024

From the beginning when this scandal was revealed, it never felt that the whole truth came out. Even the Hollywood depictions felt incomplete. This book confirmed those suspicions to me. Madoff not only made off with money, he made off with the truth when he turned himself in, pled guilty, and died.......more

Goodreads review by Miguel on August 18, 2024

Somewhat unsatisfying portrayal given that one learns very little about motivation of Madoff besides what one would assume going into it (i.e., the guy was a sociopathic crook). The audio version has the innovative use of the prison recordings, but started skipping those as they were equally uneluci......more