
No One Would Listen
A True Financial Thriller
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

How did Bernie Madoff keep his Ponzi scheme going for two decades? That's the question Markopolos answers in this account of his failed crusade to expose the fraud. Scott Brick handles the narration in the first part of the production, capturing the outrage and plaintive tone of the text. In the second half, the production switches gears, with some of the story's main characters taking a turn at the mike. The result is mostly cloying and distracting. More successful are the first-person testimonies from Madoff's victims and the recorded testimony from the hearings of the House Financial Services Committee, highlighted by Representative Gary Ackerman's entertaining assault on the hapless regulators who allowed Madoff to flourish for so long. D.B. (c) AudioFile 2010, Portland, Maine

Starred review from February 22, 2010
Markopolos, the whistleblower who filed five unheeded complaints against Ponzi king Bernie Madoff over nine years, has produced an astonishing true-life whodunit set amidst the personalities, plots, and international intrigue of Wall Street. Having collected damning information on money manager Madoff-the respected co-founder of NASDAQ who ran the largest financial scam in history-since 1999, Markopolos's work as a chartered financial analyst and certified fraud examiner, aided by an industry journalist and two colleagues from his days as a derivatives portfolio manager, lays bare the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) as a tragically inept regulating agency that "didn't give a rat's ass about protecting investors," and seemed to consider Madoff "just another guy cutting some corners." Realizing he had not one but two powerful opponents-"Madoff and this nonfunctioning agency"-Markopolos refused to give up, despite fearing for his life and his family; accordingly, he transmits his team's determination and fascination in contagious detail. The hows and whys of Madoff's eventual arrest, Markopolos's subsequent appearances before Congress, and the carnival of press coverage makes a satisfying conclusion to this strange epic; Markopolos also includes complete documentation of his formal submissions to the SEC, plus his recommendations for much-needed reform at the agency.
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