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Name: Ed Lilly
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Name: Disgruntled in NY
Email: disgruntled.blogger1@gmail.com
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Thoughts on the Madoff scandal and his victims

With all the craziness of work, 2 small kids, getting ready for Christmas, and all those things entail, I had not done much more than read the headlines on the Madoff ponzi scheme scandal.  Today, in between a couple of continuing education classes in beautiful Plymouth Meeting, PA (actually, the Double Tree was very nice), I had a chance to read through some of the Weekend Wall Street Journal's stories.  Specifically, I read the article featuring the situation of Burt Ross, former mayor of Fort Lee, NJ.  [I went to create a link to the story, but apparently it's behind the subscriber wall, so I won't link to it - sorry.]

I have sympathy for Mr. Ross, his family, and all those who were apparently bilked by Madoff and potentially others.  But I found myself having questions about what Ross has been doing with his finances when I read through it.

From the story, we learn that the Ross's have lived in their Victorian home in NJ for 33 years.  Ross went to work in 1965 as a stockbroker, was elected mayor of Fort Lee in 1971, and in 1975 he quit the brokerage business to run a commercial real-estate company.  The story describes Ross's assets as being "tied up in 13 commercial buildings he owned and managed."  Then in 2003 "he decided to sell 11 of the buildings to invest the proceeds of more than $5 million."

Later, we get a reference to Ross having planned on using the funds invested with Madoff as a source of funds to draw on to pay down the mortgage on his home, and that he hopes that they won't have to move out of their Englewood, NJ, home.

Ok, we do get information on the fact that Ross apparently has a $50,000 per year cost for property taxes and expenses for the home, so maybe that's what's driving the concern.  But it's a little cryptic on whether there's apparently mortgage payments as part of this number.

I'm just surprised that, after 33 years, and the apparent financial success the guy was having, that there would still be any significant mortgage on his home.

I realize property taxes in NJ are ridiculous, and I probably don't even want to know how high they are in Englewood as opposed to our own pricey little village of Lawrenceville, but I would have expected that the danger of having to move, given the overall picture painted, would be pretty remote.

Very strange, and very sad.

One other part of the story that caught my interest, and I'll be curious to see how it plays out with other Madoff investors, was a reference to Ross looking into the issue of refunds on taxes paid on the Madoff investments.  Should be very interesting to see how that all plays out if everybody was paying taxes on income that didn't exist.

What a mess.


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A disappointing and unpersuasive effort from Dorothy Rabinowitz

I listened to a conversation between talk radio host Dennis Praeger and Dorothy Rabinowitz of the Wall Street Journal.  You can hear this portion of the radio program here.  The program was broadcast on January 16, so before many of the people seeking party presidential nominations dropped out of the race.  Praeger had Ms. Rabinowitz on because she support John McCain’s candidacy, and Praeger sought to have her convince him of why he should support McCain in the event McCain is the Republican nominee.

Ms. Rabinowitz has written fine columns for the WSJ, and I’ve admired her columns for many years.  My recollection of her work is that she is thorough, sober and persuasive in her writing.  So I was surprisingly disappointed that she had nothing of substance to say to try to convince Mr. Praeger why she thinks John McCain is the best candidate in the Republican presidential field.

What I took from the conversation was that Ms. Rabinowitz supports McCain because, while she disagrees with him on almost every domestic policy issue, at least McCain wants to win the war against the Islamists.  As far as distinguishing McCain from any of the other Republican candidates, Ms. Rabinowitz seems to have succumbed to the flip side of the Cult of Obama.  McCain’s unrelenting and unyielding will and belief in his own correctness appears to be all Ms. Rabinowitz can say in his favor.

So after telling Praeger that she believes even the Democrat candidates would do the right thing and defend the country if they really thought we were losing to, or in danger from, the Islamofascists, for the life of me I can’t figure out how Ms. Rabinowitz supports McCain rather than any Democrat candidate.  She already doesn’t agree with McCain’s domestic policy positions.  She doesn’t think a Democrat candidate would fail to defend the American people.  What am I missing?

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