Stephanie Mack: Difference between revisions
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'''Stephanie Madoff Mack''' (nee '''Mikesell''') is an United States of America|American sociologist.<ref name=nytimes2012-09-19/><ref name=PageSix2013-03pg36-42/> | '''Stephanie Madoff Mack''' (nee '''Mikesell''') is an [[United States of America|American]] sociologist.<ref name=nytimes2012-09-19/><ref name=PageSix2013-03pg36-42/> | ||
She attended Nightingale-Bamford, a small, expensive private school, from Kindergarten through high school.<ref name=PageSix2013-03pg36-42/> | She attended Nightingale-Bamford, a small, expensive private school, from Kindergarten through high school.<ref name=PageSix2013-03pg36-42/> |
Latest revision as of 12:14, 23 July 2024
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Stephanie Madoff Mack (nee Mikesell) is an American sociologist.[1][2] She attended Nightingale-Bamford, a small, expensive private school, from Kindergarten through high school.[2] She earned a college degree at Franklin & Marshall, in Pennsylvania (U.S. state)|Pennsylvania. After graduation, in 1996, she took a job as an editorial assistant at George (magazine)|George magazine.[2] The magazine went out of business in 2001, and she started working as an assistant to Narciso Rodriguez, a fashion designer. A friend set her up on a blind date with the recently divorced Mark Madoff, and the pair married in 2003.[1][2] Her boss, Rodriguez, designed her wedding gown. She and Madoff had two children, born in 2006 and 2009. Her father-in-law, Bernie_Madoff/Definition|Bernie Madoff, had been a highly respected financier, until the collapse of the real estate bubble, in 2008.[1] He had been a swindler, and had been running one of the longest running and most successful ponzi schemes, until the bubble's collapse. On December 10, 2008 Madoff informed his wife, Ruth Madoff, Mark Madoff and his younger son Andrew Madoff, that he had been a swindler. Madoff was arrested, tried, and given a long sentence. Her husband and his brother, uncle and a variety of cousins had all worked for her father-in-laws firm, without knowing of the swindle. Nevertheless, the rest of the family was subjected to unpleasant scrutiny and suspicion. Her husband Mark committed suicide on December 10, 2010, the second anniversary of her father-in-law's confession. In 2011 Mack published a memoir about her life so far, “The End of Normal.”[3] In 2012 Mack and Deborah Madoff, the estranged wife of her brother-in-law Andrew Madoff, were sued by Irving Picard, to recover funds to pay back her father-in-law's swindled clients.[2][4][5][6] They reached settlements with the trustee in 2017. The bankruptcy judge ruled that Susan Elkins, her husband's first wife, had acquired her fortune early enough that she got to keep them.[7] References
Category:Living people Category:Date of birth missing (living people) Category:American writers |