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FACTBOX: Sentence puts Madoff into 100-year-plus group
NEW YORK |
NEW YORK (Reuters) - When Judge Denny Chin sentenced Bernard Madoff to 150 years in prison, he catapulted him into a small class of white collar criminals facing more than a century behind bars.
The sentence far exceeded those in some massive corporate fraud cases. WorldCom chief Bernie Ebbers was sentenced to 25 years, Enron Chief Executive Jeff Skilling got 24 years, and Adelphia Chief Financial Officer Timothy Rigas got 20 years, but that was later reduced to 17.
Other 100-year-plus sentences include:
SHOLAM WEISS, sentenced to 845 years in 2000:
New York businessman Weiss was convicted of bilking $125 million from the National Heritage Life Insurance Co and its elderly policyholders. He fled the United States and was sentenced in absentia, but he was eventually extradited from Austria. Weiss is at a U.S. penitentiary in Pennsylvania, with a release date of 2754, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.
KEITH POUND, sentenced to 740 years in 2000:
Pound, a mortgage broker from Illinois, was a co-defendant with Weiss in the scheme to defraud National Heritage Life Insurance Co. Pound died in prison, according to Federal Bureau of Prisons records.
NORMAN SCHMIDT, sentenced to 330 years in 2008
Schmidt was convicted of fraud in a "high yield investment scheme" that promised returns of 2 percent to 400 percent per month. He sent false monthly statements and encouraged victims to make new investments. Imprisoned at the Beaumont Federal Correction Complex in Texas, his projected release date is 2291, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.
WILL HOOVER, sentenced to 100 years in 2004
The Colorado financial advisor was sentenced after being convicted of bilking his clients out of $13 million.
Hoover is in a Colorado state prison near Sterling, Colorado, and could be eligible for parole as early as 2026.
(Compiled by Emily Chasan; Editing by Toni Reinhold
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