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Lawsuit Demands Mets Owners Pay $300 Million in Madoff "Profits"

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Fred and Jeff Wilpon (AP)

After settlement negotiations broke down yesterday between the owners of the Mets and the trustee who is suing them, alleging that their company was a “net winner” in Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, the details of the lawsuit have now been completely unsealed. Trustee Irving Picard, who is representing a group of Madoff victims, is suing the Wilpons company Sterling Equities (which controls the Mets) for at least $300 million, claiming that Madoff's "fictitious profits" fueled every part of the team's business, including "payroll, players' deferred compensation, and stadium operations." He also claims that the team ignored warnings by various financial experts about Madoff, including Merrill Lynch.

The Wilpons released a defiant statement today, claiming none of the their partners ever knew or suspected that Madoff ran a Ponzi scheme: "The Trustee's lawsuit is an outrageous "strong arm" effort to try to force a settlement by threatening to ruin our reputations and businesses which we have built for over 50 years. This is a flagrant abuse of the Trustee's authority and we will not succumb to his pressure. The conclusions in the complaint are not supported by the facts. While they may make for good headlines, they are abusive, unfair and untrue. We categorically reject them. We should not be made victims twice over - the first time by Madoff, and again by the Trustee's actions."

What has become clear is that even if none of them were aware of the scheme, team CEO Fred Wilpon and his family did have a close relationship with Madoff, one which may have led him astray in adopting some of his business practices. And while Wilpon said he was "confident we will win in court," his reputation has been very damaged by the allegations and the release of the formerly sealed complaint. One source told the Post he agreed with the Wilpons that Picard and the trustees are looking to force a big settlement, but it doesn't change the hard facts about the Mets financial future: "This will devolve into a full sale of the team," he predicted.

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Comments [rss]

  • splicernyc

    Is it just me or does Jeff Wilpon look like a character out of Wallace & Grommit?

  • Len_Drexler

    ignored warnings by various financial experts about Madoff, including Merrill Lynch.

    One of Jon Stewart's best lines was when Merrill Lynch was defending their 2008 bonuses as necessary to retain their "best people". Stewart screamed, "You don't have 'best people!'"

  • Mets can't get a break..

  • GalBklyn

    they don't deserve a break.

  • ptginnyc

    Forcing the Mets to sell, perhaps to competent team managers? Still sucks for the Wilpons, but they're now in a collective group of people who profited as others got screwed, so it only makes sense that their personal relationship with him doesn't exactly make them seem innocent or deserving of keeping what they thought was their's.

    Buster Olney:
    The Mets' best defense in Madoff suit: We signed Oliver Perez and Luis Castillo to $60m deals-and WE were supposed to sniff out Ponzi scheme?

  • felixthecat

    NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO, holy moly shit, how the hell are we going to win this season?????? burn in hell MADOFF, burn in hell.

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