Chief economist’s apparent suicide in a series of bizarre deaths

Palinurus said:
This list of 36 was also published on SOTT recently:

http://www.sott.net/article/289930-Another-banker-found-dead-under-questionable-circumstances

There was another death recently of a MassMutual executive who "had access to highly sensitive data on bank profits resulting from the collection of life insurance proceeds from her insurance company employer on the death of bank workers". Wall Street on Parade has investigated the massive amounts of life insurance policies owned by BOA, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan and Citigroup and thinks there may be some connection to at least some of the deaths. Or maybe that is just a 'bonus' for the banks - getting rid of people who know too much and benefiting financially as well.

See the articles on SOTT here:

http://www.sott.net/article/289995-Bank-related-death-Slain-MassMutual-executive-had-access-to-sensitive-data-on-Bank-Owned-Life-Insurance-policies

http://www.sott.net/article/278421-Death-a-trade-secret-Suspicious-deaths-of-bankers-are-now-classified-as-Trade-Secrets-according-to-Federal-regulator
 
1st casualty of 2015 : Omar Meza, of AIG Financial Distributors, on January 9th. It think that the list will be long.

_http://www.desertsun.com/story/news/crime_courts/2015/01/16/palm-desert-omar-meza-dead-marriott/21873505/

I still do not understand why bankers fall like insects since 2014.
 
Another suspicious death of note, but instead of a banker there looks to be significant connections to the defense military industrial complex.

http://www.thedailysheeple.com/head-of-it-companies-monitoring-pentagon-fbi-nsa-and-army-presumed-dead-after-suspicious-fire_012015

Head of IT Companies Monitoring Pentagon, FBI, NSA and Army Presumed Dead After Suspicious Fire

"In the vein of all the suicided bankers, here’s another mysterious death connected to some pretty high places."
 
A report that a London Stock Exchange financier had leaped from the seventh floor to his death on August 15, 2017.

City worker dies after falling from seventh floor of London Stock Exchange
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/08/15/city-worker-dies-falling-seventh-floor-london-stock-exchange/

A City worker has died after falling from the seventh floor of the London Stock Exchange.

The man fell from a glass walkway inside the building at around 9.45am on Tuesday, landing in the front lobby.

Police were called at just before 10am and the man - believed to be married and in his 40s - was pronounced dead at 10.10am.

The financier is thought to have been working on the first floor, but fell from the seventh floor.

His colleagues were said to be devastated, with several having been sent home. Police are trying to contact the man's wife to inform her of the incident.

One worker based at the London Stock Exchange said: "'It's horrifying, that's all I can say.''

A fellow staff member said: ''I came in this morning and there was a screen up in the reception lobby area and ambulances and police.

''There was an internal memo saying there had been an incident. 'The building has walkways on each floor and near the lifts there is a gap and you can see all the way up and down."

Workers said that the seventh floor is full of conference rooms and no firm was based there.

In a statement, the LSE said: "We can confirm an incident this morning where a London Stock Exchange Group colleague fell from an upper-floor balcony and died.

"The emergency services were called immediately and are dealing with the incident. We will continue to offer them every support and co-operation possible.

"Our thoughts and condolences are with the family and friends of our dear colleague. We would ask that the privacy of the family of the deceased be respected at this time."

A London Ambulance Service spokesman said: "We were called at 9.56am to reports of a person fallen from a height at Paternoster Square, EC4.

"We sent a number of resources to the scene, including an incident response officer, an advanced paramedic, an ambulance crew and a motorbike responder. Sadly the patient was dead at the scene."

A City of London Police spokesman said: ''We were called to the London Stock Exchange in Paternoster Square on Tuesday, 15 August at 9.58am to a report of a man who had fallen from an upper floor in the building to the ground.

"London Ambulance Service attended and the man was pronounced dead at 10.10am.

"The City of London Police is currently investigating the circumstances around the death and the incident is being treated as non-suspicious. We are now working to inform the man's next of kin."


Senior executive gave disturbing message before committing suicide

Elite Banker Jumps from London Stock Exchange Building with a Chilling Warning
http://www.neonnettle.com/news/2553-elite-banker-jumps-from-london-stock-exchange-building-with-a-chilling-warning

A high-level senior investment banker has leaped to his death from a 7th-floor balcony in the London Stock Exchange building.

The man jumped from a glass walkway of the British capital's busy financial hub and landed in the front lobby at around 9.45am UK time. He was pronounced dead at 10.10am shortly after police arrived, although it's believed the fall would've killed him instantly.

Although he has yet to be named by police, workers described him a "one of the bigwigs". According to one of the witnesses, he "ran along the walkway shouting and put one hand on the glass wall and jumped over it with both feet." "He didn't even hesitate. He was shouting, 'the end is coming! Get out while you still can!'" "It was awful."

Another worker based at the London Stock Exchange said: "It's horrifying, that's all I can say." A fellow member of staff said: "I came in this morning and there was a screen up in the reception lobby area and ambulances and police. "There was an internal memo saying there had been an incident. "The building has walkways on each floor and near the lifts, there is a gap and you can see all the way up and down."

Telegraph reports: Workers said that the seventh floor is full of conference rooms and no firm was based there. In a statement, the LSE said: "We can confirm an incident this morning where a London Stock Exchange Group colleague fell from an upper-floor balcony and died.

The emergency services were called immediately and are dealing with the incident. We will continue to offer them every support and co-operation possible. "Our thoughts and condolences are with the family and friends of our dear colleague. We would ask that the privacy of the family of the deceased be respected at this time."

A London Ambulance Service spokesman said: "We were called at 9.56am to reports of a person fallen from a height at Paternoster Square, EC4. "We sent a number of resources to the scene, including an incident response officer, an advanced paramedic, an ambulance crew and a motorbike responder. Sadly the patient was dead at the scene."

A City of London Police spokesman said: "We were called to the London Stock Exchange in Paternoster Square on Tuesday, 15 August at 9.58am to a report of a man who had fallen from an upper floor in the building to the ground. "London Ambulance Service attended and the man was pronounced dead at 10.10am. "

The City of London Police is currently investigating the circumstances around the death and the incident is being treated as non-suspicious. We are now working to inform the man's next of kin."
 
A Chinese financier ended dead in bizarre accident:

The co-chairman and co-founder of HNA Group, a Chinese conglomerate that spent heavily in recent years to build a global profile but that has since grappled with high debt, died from an accidental fall in France, the company said on Wednesday.

...

“He wanted to have his picture taken by someone in his group,” Col. Hubert Mériaux, of the Gendarmerie force that helps police the area, said by telephone. As he climbed onto a low wall with a view of the local landscape, “he fell backward, 10 to 15 meters,” Colonel Mériaux said, referring to 33 to 50 feet.

Wang Jian, Co-Founder of Chinese Giant HNA, Dies in France
 
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