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Image: Deutsche Bank HQ (Wiki Commons). |
March 26, 2014
The dismal list of financial executive deaths has recently increased to 11 in the last few months.
Speculation has surrounded many of these deaths (and suicides) as to the reasoning; none more than the first – William Broeksmit, an executive who worked in Deutsche Bank’s risk function and advised senior leadership who hanged himself in his South Kensington home in late January. However, as the WSJ reports, we now know why this poor man felt compelled to take his own life: he was “anxious about various authorities investigating areas of the bank where he worked” (and yes, we are well aware of the grammatical and temporal impossibilities suggested by this article’s title).
Via WSJ,
While a Deutsche Bank spokeswoman said Tuesday that “Bill was not under suspicion of wrongdoing in any matter,”
according to statements read at a coroner’s inquest in London, the
former senior executive at Deutsche Bank, who committed suicide in late
January, was concerned about investigations into the German bank.
Mr. Broeksmit, an American born in Chicago who retired from Deutsche Bank in February 2013, hanged himself at his London home on Jan. 26, according to a statement read at the coroner’s inquest.
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