Feeder fund investors may get tax relief
WASHINGTON - Tax relief for thousands of small, indirect investors in Bernard Madoff’s swindle and other fraudulent schemes appears close to Senate adoption as part of a broader bill to extend unemployment benefits.
An amendment by Senator Charles Schumer, Democrat from New York, puts the indirect Madoff investors - who channeled their money through “feeder funds’’ run by middlemen - on the same tax footing for their “phantom’’ profits as wealthy investors who were required to put up millions to invest directly. The people who invested through feeder funds often were not aware that their money went to Madoff.
The unemployment extension bill, which provides up to 14 additional weeks of insurance benefits to out-of-work people whose benefits are running out, was expected to pass the Senate late yesterday or today.
The Internal Revenue Service issued guidelines in March that allowed tax relief and refunds for victims of Ponzi schemes like Madoff’s, in which investors are paid with other investors’ money rather than actual profits on their investment. But investors in a business with more than $15 million in assets - a level exceeded by the Madoff feeder funds - were not eligible for the tax break.
Madoff investors should have paid taxes on earnings from their “feeder fund’’ investments through the years - the scheme from the early 1990s to his arrest in December. Given that some of those were fictitious profits, investors say they should be entitled to refunds of those taxes.![]()



