The founder of an investment fund that lost as much as US$ 1.4 billion in
the alleged Bernard Madoff scheme committed suicide Tuesday at his Manhattan
office in New York, the New York-based Daily News reported yesterday.
Rene-Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet -- grief-stricken after becoming one of
the top 10 losers in the reportedly 50 billion dollars Ponzi scheme -- slashed
both wrists with a box cutter and bled to death, cops were cited as saying.
Tidy, precise and punctilious to the end, the CEO of Access International
Advisors locked the door of his 22nd floor office at509 Madison Ave., sat in his
swivel chair -- and bled into a garbage pail to minimize the mess, the report
said.
It was the first known suicide connected to Madoff's scam.
The lonely death of the tormented 65-year-old money manager who invested the
fortunes of the Rothschilds, Bettencourts and other high-born European grandees
sent shock waves around the globe, said the report.
Little was known about de la Villehuchet's business practices, but Bill
Rapavy, a former partner at Access, summed him up in two words: "He's
irreproachable."