NEW YORK (AP) – The financial whirlpool created by Bernard Madoff continued to churn Tuesday as the price tag of liquidating his old firm rose, and duped investors including the actors Kevin Bacon and Kyra Sedgwick struggled to accurately estimate how much they lost.

A publicist for the celebrity couple confirmed that they, too, were among the unlikely victims of what Madoff, according to the FBI, has described as a giant Ponzi scheme. The spokesman, Allen Eichhorn, wouldn’t say how much of their savings were gone.

Madoff himself has pegged the losses at $50 billion, but details of who lost what remain unclear.

Yeshiva University, which had initially estimated its losses in Madoff’s alleged scheme at $110 million, offered a clarification Tuesday, saying that its actual losses had been much smaller.

The university’s chief financial officer, J. Michael Gower, said in an e-mail that the school’s actual principal investment in a hedge fund linked to Madoff had been only $14.5 million.

On paper, that stake had exploded in value over the past 15 years to $110 million, but Gower said all of those “profits” now appear to be entirely fictitious, meaning that the losses were mostly fictitious too.

Meanwhile, one part of the cost of cleaning up after Madoff’s collapsed firm also came into clearer focus.

A U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge on Tuesday approved the transfer of $28.1 million to cover expenses tied to the liquidation of Madoff’s investment firm.

Irving Picard, the trustee presiding over the liquidation, said he needed the $28.1 million to cover employee salaries and other costs, according to court documents. Bank of New York Mellon Corp. previously agreed to transfer the funds, but Bankruptcy Judge Burton Lifland first had to approve the transfer.

Richard Bernard, a lawyer with Baker Hostetler who was representing Picard at the hearing, said the transferred funds will not affect any recovery for investors. The funds are being transferred from one account that had already been frozen. Lawyers continue to investigate if Madoff had any other accounts that have not yet been frozen, Bernard added.

BNY Mellon already transferred about $883,000 to cover costs tied to the liquidation.

Picard will oversee the liquidation of assets from Madoff’s investment firm as the Securities Investor Protection Corp. attempts to help investors recoup their money. SIPC was created by Congress in 1970 to protect investors when a brokerage firm fails and cash and securities are missing from accounts. Funds can be used to satisfy the remaining claims of each customer up to a maximum of $500,000. The figure includes a maximum of up to $100,000 on claims for cash.

SIPC said in a statement that claim forms are expected to be sent to investors and creditors no later than Jan. 9. The forms will also be available for download on SIPC’s Web site.

Thousands of investors – from large hedge funds to individual investors to charities – lost money in the alleged Ponzi scheme.

Besides Bacon, Hollywood victims have included a charity linked to director Steven Spielberg and his DreamWorks partner Jeffrey Katzenberg, and screenwriter Eric Roth, whose credits include, “Forrest Gump” and “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.”

Madoff faces a Wednesday deadline to provide the Securities and Exchange Commission with a written accounting of his assets, liabilities and properties. The report will likely provide insight into how much money investors could recover.

Madoff agreed to list all assets, funds or property he held and the names and locations of entities, bank accounts, brokerage accounts, investments or assets held by his business, Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC.

His lawyer confirmed Tuesday that he intends to meet the deadline.

On Monday, a judge presiding over civil claims against Madoff said he may be willing to consider extending relief to those who invested in Madoff’s business through third parties. To consider allowing investors who invested through third parties to file claims with SIPC, U.S. District Judge Louis L. Stanton said he needs a formal application and briefing from SIPC, the Securities and Exchange Commission, a trustee for Madoff’s business and representatives of investors.

A congressional committee is scheduled to hold a hearing Monday to review whether the SEC had the resources to investigate the alleged fraud by Madoff and determine new safeguards that need to be put in place to help protect investors. The SEC has come under criticism for not fully investigating fraud allegations against Madoff’s investment firm. Even SEC Chairman Christopher Cox said there were multiple failures by agency staff in looking into the allegations.

The congressional hearing is part of the House Financial Services Committee’s broader review as it undertakes overhauling financial markets regulation in the coming years amid the ongoing credit and housing crisis.

Madoff, 70, a former Nasdaq stock market chairman, has become one of the most vilified people in America since news broke Dec. 11 that he allegedly had been running a giant Ponzi scheme, paying returns to certain investors out of the principal received from others.

So far, investors have said that they have lost more than $30 billion, according to an Associated Press calculation.

Reports indicate Madoff was running the alleged scam for decades.


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