It has been a whole year since Bernie  Madoff was arrested for the largest Ponzi scheme in history. In honor  of the anniversary, CNN Money has put together an article looking back  on the illegal scam, the money trail, and how the victims are coping  a year later. Many of them assert that they have yet to see any of their  money returned.
"We've got nothing back," said  Dana Foy, a 57-year-old computer programmer in New Mexico.
 
Foy, who wouldn't identify how much money  he lost, saw his dream of a comfortable retirement with his wife wiped  out by Madoff's scheme, which came crashing down when he was arrested  on Dec. 11, 2008.
About $20 billion in investor funds were  lost to Madoff's scam, according to the Web site of the court-appointed  trustee Irving Picard, who is tasked with recovering and allocating  as much of the money as possible. Some of the victims have been reimbursed,  but many are still waiting.
Of the 16,000 claims that have been filed,  about 70% have been processed, according to Picard. Of those 11,563  processed claims, 1,647 have been determined to be valid. Most of the  claims, some 9,916, have been denied. Many of those are from people  who invested in feeder funds, which are other funds that invested with  Madoff. Claimants have to try and get reimbursement from those fund  managers, not through the trustee.
