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  • When You Con Your Own

    WHEN YOU CON YOUR OWN
    Gregory Rodriguez

    Los Angeles Times
    Dec 22, 2008
    CA

    Will Madoff's scheme go down as the affinity fraud of all time?

    We're obsessed with race and ethnic relations in the U.S., so much
    so that we tend to believe that most crime, violent or otherwise,
    is committed across racial, ethnic or religious lines. We make a
    special category for "hate" crimes. Governments compile statistics on
    them. Journalists, always looking for the next great divide, eagerly
    read intergroup conflict into just about any form of antisocial
    behavior.

    To a point it makes sense -- we know that humans are capable of
    terrible atrocities against the "other." But in other ways, the focus
    on such crimes leads us to forget that the overwhelming majority of
    criminal activity is intra-ethnic, not inter-ethnic. The news about the
    financially ruinous criminal acts confessed by Bernard L. Madoffis a
    stunning example. Madoff is Jewish, and so are most of his victims. He
    ran in privileged circles, and so did they. Forget strangers --
    Madoff's alleged $50-billion fraud is a good example of the fact that
    it's people like us who can easily be our biggest enemies.

    Consider the data about who does what to whom. From 1976 to 2005,
    86% of white murder victims were killed by whites. In that same
    period, 94% of black victims were murdered by blacks. And victimizers
    and victims don't just share racial categories, they also tend to
    know each other. We've all heard the statistic that the majority of
    victims killed by handguns are murdered by people they knew. Likewise,
    according to the Department of Justice, three in four women who have
    been raped and/or physically assaulted since age 18 are victimized
    by men they either know, dated or were once or currently married to.

    Cons, like violence, tend to be intra-ethnic and
    intra-communal. Between 1998 and 2001, more than 90,000 investors
    in 28 states lost more than $2.2 billion in what the Securities
    and Exchange Commission calls "affinity fraud" schemes, in which a
    member of an affinity group targeted and took his neighbors, friends
    or co-religionists. Madoff's scheme could take the affinity-fraud cake.

    The element of betrayal in any "intra" crime makes it especially
    devastating. That's because, in these cases, trust -- which is crucial
    for intimate relationships and society at large -- is destroyed. When
    we're wronged by the people we've let into our circle -- or worse,
    the people we've loved -- the heartbreak adds insult to injury.

    Only two years ago, the SEC issued a warning about a rising tide of
    affinity fraud. These scams, it said, "exploit the trust that exists
    in groups of people who have something in common."

    Perpetrators of affinity fraud often succeed by claiming that because
    they are "just like" their investors, they are in a unique position
    to help them. They also leverage group pride. One recently indicted
    scammer said he wanted to create more black millionaires; another
    said he was "proudly Hispanic." Others can highlight the tensions
    between their affinity group and others, sometimes accusing outsiders
    of keeping them out of investment markets.

    The government's list of such frauds shows that ethnic groups and
    churches are especially vulnerable. According to the SEC, in Glendale,
    an Armenian American took other Armenian Americans for $19 million,
    and elderly Jehovah's Witnesses and Korean immigrants have also been
    targeted. Pyramid schemes like the one Madoff said he ran-- where
    later investors provide the return for those who get in earlier -- are
    especially common. Indeed, Charles Ponzi, who gave pyramid schemes his
    name in the 1920s, mostly defrauded his fellow Italian Americans. In
    part because these crimes do target identifiable groups and shatter the
    victim's notions regarding the relative trustworthiness of their group
    members, University of Maryland law professor Lisa M. Fairfax argues
    that affinity fraud should be added to the roster of hate crimes.

    I'm not sure that it makes sense to add to or change that definition --
    hate crimes are complicated enough to understand and prosecute. But
    Fairfax's notion that affinity fraud deserves special notice is worth
    considering. You might be tempted to say that Madoff only hurt his
    own, but don't be too smug if you and yours weren't among them. The
    destruction of the social fabric inherent in Madoff's actions affects
    us all. When trust is defeated, everyone loses.
    From: Baghdasarian
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