Bernie Madoff's Mets jacket

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  • metsbats
    Moderator
    • Nov 2005
    • 3840

    Bernie Madoff's Mets jacket

    Bernie Madoff's personal items are going on the auction block including his Mets jacket.



    NEW YORK (AP) — Of all the items set to go on the auction block this week at a midtown Manhattan hotel, there's one that would take some mettle to wear in public: A satin New York Mets baseball jacket emblazoned with the name "Madoff."

    The jacket — valued at between $500 and $700 — is among hundreds of pieces of jewelry, clothing and other personal effects once owned by disgraced financier and vanquished Mets fan Bernard Madoff and his wife, Ruth.

    Madoff, 71, was sentenced in June to 150 years in prison for orchestrating a massive Ponzi scheme that spanned decades. The property will be sold to raise money for his victims. Gaston & Sheehan Auctioneers Inc. will hold the auction Saturday at the New York Sheraton.

    Though thousands of investors with Madoff's once-respected advisory firm believed their securities accounts were worth tens of billions of dollars, he never made investments and instead siphoned new investors' money to pay returns to existing ones — and to fuel a life of luxury.

    Madoff's punishment included a forfeiture order that stripped the Madoffs of nearly all their wealth. The order gave the U.S. Marshals Service authority to seize and sell his homes, boats, cars and other personal property.

    The smaller-ticket collectables on the list of sale items include stationery with Bernard and Ruth's names printed on it; flatware engraved with the initials "RMB"; and a wallet embossed with "BLM." There's art, golf clubs and fishing rods. Also a cache of designer purses — Hermes, Louis Vuitton, Prada — valued at hundreds of dollars a piece and antiques that range into the thousands.

    It's clear Madoff had a taste for wildly expensive wristwatches, especially Rolex. A half dozen Rolexes are available, including one listed as a "vintage Rolex O.P. 'Monoblocco' chronograph," also known as — yes — a "Prisoner Watch." Estimated value is $75,000 to $87,500.

    The Mets jacket carries its own special meaning: Team owners Fred Wilpon and Saul Katz were among the victims of Madoff's fraud. Earlier this year, his season tickets behind home plate at the new Citi Field were auctioned for $38,100 on eBay.
    metsbats86@aol.com

    Always looking for 1973,1986,1988,1999,2000,2006 game used Mets post season and Bobby M. Jones and Ed Hearn NY Mets game used bats.
  • metsbats
    Moderator
    • Nov 2005
    • 3840

    #2
    Re: Bernie Madoff's Mets jacket

    Bid in a Proxibid online auction to acquire a JACKET: [1] Blue satin with orange trim jacket labeled and stitched with: NY Mets, 'MADF', '25' an from Gaston & Sheehan Auctioneers, Inc.



    Sold for 14.5K
    metsbats86@aol.com

    Always looking for 1973,1986,1988,1999,2000,2006 game used Mets post season and Bobby M. Jones and Ed Hearn NY Mets game used bats.

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    • danrosquete@hotmail.com
      Banned
      • Dec 2008
      • 205

      #3
      Re: Bernie Madoff's Mets jacket

      Mets Bats

      Contact me at danrosquete@gmail.com

      I have a Benny Agbayani game used jersey you maybe interested in

      Dan

      Comment

      • godwulf
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2007
        • 1864

        #4
        Re: Bernie Madoff's Mets jacket

        Originally posted by danrosquete@hotmail.com
        I have a Benny Agbayani game used jersey you maybe interested in
        Why, who did he swindle?

        This puts me in mind of an auction I saw, a few years ago, for a baseball bat used in the infamous 'Family' episode of the X-Files...which in the show is used by some inbred mutants to murder several people. Avid screen-used bat collector that I am, I thought about bidding on this one for all of about four seconds. Some things just cry out not to be collected.

        Yeah, okay, the Madoff jacket is a curiosity, I get that...but 14.5 grand? And, no offense, but what kind of a Mets fan (if it was a Mets fan who bought it) is somehow gratified at the connection implied (and, in a way, immortalized) by that jacket's existence?
        Jeff
        godwulf1@cox.net

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