Psychiatric Care Facility Taps MassMutual as Bundled 403(b)/DB Provider

MassMutual's Retirement Services Division has been selected by The Austen Riggs Center, based in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, as the new full-service provider for the company's $7 million defined benefit plan, as well as its $5 million 403(b) plan.

“This consolidation provides a tremendous opportunity for Austen Riggs to tap MassMutual’s nonprofit expertise while gaining efficiencies with a single provider for both our defined contribution and defined benefit plans,” said Chauncey Collins, director of operations, Austen Riggs, in a press release. Collins praised MassMutual’s employee communications platform and educational materials

The Austen Riggs Center is a not-for-profit, open psychiatric continuum of care facility specializing in the psychotherapeutic treatment of psychiatric disorders and has offered long-term residential and hospital-level psychiatric treatment for 85 years.

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Law Firm Files Another Madoff-Related Suit

Spector Roseman Kodroff&Willis, P.C., filed another class action against Austin Capital Management Ltd. for millions of dollars of losses due to improper investments in securities controlled by Bernard Madoff and his company.

The suit, brought on behalf of the Pittsburgh-based Board of Trustees of the Steamfitters Local 449 Retirement Security Fund and a nationwide class of similar funds, alleges that Austin failed to prudently invest the benefit funds’ assets, in violation of Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), according to an announcement from the law firm. The complaint says that Austin was a fiduciary to the class of benefit funds and owed them the duty to manage investments with the highest care, but instead failed to notice the numerous red flags about the Madoff-related securities.

According to the announcement, the red flags included:

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  • the lack of transparency in the operations of Madoff and Madoff Securities, including Madoff’s refusal to disclose his investment strategy;
  • the fact that investment returns of Madoff Securities were abnormally smooth, with very little volatility, including only five months of negative returns in the past 12 years;
  • the inability of other funds, using Madoff’s stated method, to generate returns in any way comparable;
  • the fact that Madoff acted as his own prime broker, while most hedge funds used large banks as their prime brokers;
  • the fact that monthly account statements sent to Madoff investors did not support the returns being supposedly earned;
  • the fact that Madoff’s auditors consisted of one office in Rockland County, New York, with three employees: one was 78 years old and lived in Florida, and one was a secretary.

The complaint notes that numerous other investment managers did discover the red flags and declined to invest in Madoff-related securities.

The suit also names as defendants individual officers and managers at Austin as well as its affiliated companies, KeyCorp, Victory Capital Management, and Austin Capital Management GP Corp. Plaintiffs seek to represent all employee benefit plans that used Austin as an investment manager and lost money due to Austin’s purchase of Madoff-related securities.

This is second such suit the law firm has filed against Austin Capital (see “Union Sues Over Madoff Pension Losses).The hedge fund firm also faces a suit brought by Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins LLP (see “Hedge Fund Firm Sued for Madoff Investments).

Madoff-related cases were responsible for 30% of all securities cases in the first quarter of 2009 (see “Madoff-Related Suits Main Cause of Litigation Surge“).

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