Another Sudden Death of JPMorgan Worker: 34-Year Old Jason Alan Salais
Original:
Gugliano
Original:
On the evening of Sunday, December 15 of last year, six weeks before the onset of the latest rash of tragic deaths of young men in their 30s employed at JPMorgan, the Pearland, Texas police received a call of a person in distress outside a Walgreens pharmacy at 6122 Broadway in Pearland. The individual in distress was Jason Alan Salais, a 34-year old Information Technology specialist who had worked at JPMorgan Chase since May 2008.
A family member confirmed to Wall Street On Parade that Salais died of a heart attack on the same evening the report of distress went in to the police. The incidence of heart attack or myocardial infarction among men aged 20 to 39 is one half of one percent of the population, according to the National Center for Health Statistics and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, based on 2007 to 2010 data, marking this as another unusual death at JPMorgan.
A person identifying himself as Dave Steiner wrote the ***owing about Salais in the online condolence book provided by the funeral home: “My condolences to your entire family at the sudden passing of Jason. When I had the pleasure of interviewing Jason to be a part of the team at J.P. Morgan back in 2008, it was clear to me within just a few short minutes that he was a man of character, intelligence, work ethic, kindness and integrity. In the years that ***owed, and until the sad news of this week, I was witness to his hard work, the friendships he built, stories of his beloved family and of course baseball…”
According to the LinkedIn profile for Salais, he was engaged in Client Technology Service “L3 Operate Support” and previously “FXO Operate L2 Support” at JPMorgan. Prior to joining JPMorgan in 2008, Salais had worked as a Client Software Technician at SunGard and a UNIX Systems Analyst at Logix Communications.
Six weeks after the sudden death of Salais, Gabriel Magee, a 39-year old Vice President who was also engaged in Information Technology at JPMorgan, this time in London, died under extremely suspicious circumstances. A Coroner’s Inquest into the matter will be held on May 15 in London.
Family and friends report that Magee was a happy, healthy, vibrant young man who emailed his girlfriend on the evening of January 27 to say he was finishing up at work and would be home shortly. When he did not arrive, his girlfriend notified police and called local hospitals. According to the Metropolitan Police in London, at around 8:02 a.m. the next morning, workers looking out their windows saw Magee’s body lying on a 9th level rooftop that jutted out from the 33-story JPMorgan building in the Canary Wharf section of London.
London newspapers immediately called the death a suicide, initially suggesting that thousands of commuters had seen Magee jump from the 33rd level rooftop. When Wall Street On Parade pressed the Metropolitan Police on the issue of actual eyewitnesses who had seen Magee jump, the Police backed away from the suggestion that the fall had actually been observed by eyewitnesses.
Magee worked in the European headquarters for JPMorgan at 25 Bank Street in the borough of Tower Hamlets. Drawings and plans submitted by JPMorgan to the borough after it purchased the building for £495 million in 2010, show that the 9th floor roof is accessible “via the stair from level 8 within the existing Level 9 plant enclosure…”
According to Magee’s LinkedIn profile, his specific area of specialty at JPMorgan was “Technical architecture oversight for planning, development, and operation of systems for fixed income securities and interest rate derivatives.”
Two young employees engaged in computer technology dying in such a short span of time might seem bizarre at a bank. But JPMorgan is not just any bank when it comes to computer technology. According to Anish Bhimani, the Chief Information Risk Officer at JPMorgan Chase, in an interview published at the Information Networking Institute (INI) at Carnegie Mellon, JPMorgan has “more software developers than Google, and more technologists than Microsoft…we get to build things at scale that have never been done before.”
Let that sink in for a moment: a bank that has “more software developers than Google.” The growing concern in Congress is that America’s biggest bank by assets is now so complex in terms of derivative risks on and off its books and software programs that are incomprehensible to its regulators, that it could pose systemic risk to the U.S. economy in a replay of the Citigroup debacle of 2008.
Six days after the death of Magee, Ryan Crane, an Executive Director involved in trading at JPMorgan’s New York office, was found dead in his home in Stamford, Connecticut on February 3. No cause of death or circumstances surrounding the death has been released to the public. The Chief Medical Examiner’s office will only say that the cause of death is “pending” and final results will not be announced for several more weeks. Wall Street On Parade called the Stamford Police last week to ask for the police incident report. Under Connecticut sunshine laws that report should be available to the press. We were informed that if we were able to obtain the incident report, most information would likely be redacted.
Crane’s death on February 3 was not reported by any major media until February 13, ten days later, when Bloomberg News ran a brief story.
On February 18 of last week, again reports emerged of many witnesses having seen a 33-year old JPMorgan employee jump from the rooftop of a 30-story office building, Chater House, in Hong Kong where JPMorgan leases space. No eyewitnesses have been identified by name.
The decedent’s age and the fact he was employed by JPMorgan is all that the media can agree on. The South China Morning Post, an English language newspaper in Hong Kong, has published four articles calling the deceased an “investment banker” and warning that stress in this job may lead to suicide. The South China Morning Post’s competitor in Hong Kong, The Standard, also an English language newspaper, reports that the employee is an accountant working in the finance department at JPMorgan – about as far removed from an investment banker as one could get.
The man’s name has been reported by various media in all of the ***owing incarnations: Dennis Li, Li Junjie, Dennis Li Jun Jie, and Dennis Lee.
Despite four emails to Joe Evangelisti, a Managing Director and spokesperson for JPMorgan, Evangelisti would not provide the name and job title for the deceased employee, saying only that “Our HK team communicated with reporters late last week on this. Here’s the Bloomberg story.” The Bloomberg story provided by Evangelisti was seven sentences long and does not appear on the U.S. web site of Bloomberg News. The earlier story by Bloomberg News, circulated further at the San Francisco Chronicle, depicted the employee as a “foreign exchange trader” citing the (wait for it) South China Morning Post.
When Wall Street On Parade pointed out via email to Evangelisti that under Fair Disclosure rules (Reg FD) a publicly traded company in the U.S. has an obligation to issue its press releases to everyone at the same time and that we would like a direct statement from him on the employee’s name and job title (not another media outlet’s interpretation of JPMorgan’s statement), Wall Street On Parade heard no further from Evangelisti, despite openly copying the media relations folks at the Securities and Exchange Commission on the entire email thread.
The New York Post pointed out in its reporting that there is “no other known link between any of the deaths” outside of the individuals working for the same company. In fact, there are numerous links: all of the men are in their 30s, while according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the expected longevity in 2011 for a U.S. male is 76.3 years. All of the men are believed to have been covered by a life insurance policy which pays JPMorgan upon the death of its employees. (Insurance experts say that larger death benefits can be obtained on younger, highly skilled workers because the death benefit is a function of the number of years of lost earnings.)
But perhaps the most important link is this: three weeks before the death of Salais and within a little more than a month of the other deaths, JPMorgan had been put under a form of probation by the U.S. Justice Department. In exchange for a Deferred Prosecution Agreement that ran for two years and $1.7 billion in fines to avoid the criminal indictment of individuals and the firm for facilitating the largest financial fraud in U.S. history, Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, JPMorgan was forced to agree to “secure the attendance and truthful statements or testimony of any past or current officers, agents, or employees at any meeting or interview or before the grand jury…provide in a responsive and prompt fashion, and upon request, on an expedited schedule, all documents, records, information and other evidence in JPMorgan’s possession, custody or control as may be requested by the Office, the FBI, or designated governmental agency…bring to the Office’s attention all criminal conduct by JPMorgan or any of its employees…commit no crimes under the federal laws of the United States subsequent to the execution of this Agreement.”
When a rash of sudden deaths occur among a most unlikely cohort of 30-year olds at a bank that has just settled felony charges and been put on notice that it will be indicted if it commits any further felonies; when it is currently under investigation on multiple continents for potentially committing criminal acts in the realm of interest rate and/or foreign exchange rigging — for the press to cavalierly call these deaths “non suspicious” before inquests have been conducted and findings released by medical examiners shows an unseemly indifference to a worker’s life and an alarming insensitivity to the grief stricken families still searching for answers.
A family member confirmed to Wall Street On Parade that Salais died of a heart attack on the same evening the report of distress went in to the police. The incidence of heart attack or myocardial infarction among men aged 20 to 39 is one half of one percent of the population, according to the National Center for Health Statistics and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, based on 2007 to 2010 data, marking this as another unusual death at JPMorgan.
A person identifying himself as Dave Steiner wrote the ***owing about Salais in the online condolence book provided by the funeral home: “My condolences to your entire family at the sudden passing of Jason. When I had the pleasure of interviewing Jason to be a part of the team at J.P. Morgan back in 2008, it was clear to me within just a few short minutes that he was a man of character, intelligence, work ethic, kindness and integrity. In the years that ***owed, and until the sad news of this week, I was witness to his hard work, the friendships he built, stories of his beloved family and of course baseball…”
According to the LinkedIn profile for Salais, he was engaged in Client Technology Service “L3 Operate Support” and previously “FXO Operate L2 Support” at JPMorgan. Prior to joining JPMorgan in 2008, Salais had worked as a Client Software Technician at SunGard and a UNIX Systems Analyst at Logix Communications.
Six weeks after the sudden death of Salais, Gabriel Magee, a 39-year old Vice President who was also engaged in Information Technology at JPMorgan, this time in London, died under extremely suspicious circumstances. A Coroner’s Inquest into the matter will be held on May 15 in London.
Family and friends report that Magee was a happy, healthy, vibrant young man who emailed his girlfriend on the evening of January 27 to say he was finishing up at work and would be home shortly. When he did not arrive, his girlfriend notified police and called local hospitals. According to the Metropolitan Police in London, at around 8:02 a.m. the next morning, workers looking out their windows saw Magee’s body lying on a 9th level rooftop that jutted out from the 33-story JPMorgan building in the Canary Wharf section of London.
London newspapers immediately called the death a suicide, initially suggesting that thousands of commuters had seen Magee jump from the 33rd level rooftop. When Wall Street On Parade pressed the Metropolitan Police on the issue of actual eyewitnesses who had seen Magee jump, the Police backed away from the suggestion that the fall had actually been observed by eyewitnesses.
Magee worked in the European headquarters for JPMorgan at 25 Bank Street in the borough of Tower Hamlets. Drawings and plans submitted by JPMorgan to the borough after it purchased the building for £495 million in 2010, show that the 9th floor roof is accessible “via the stair from level 8 within the existing Level 9 plant enclosure…”
According to Magee’s LinkedIn profile, his specific area of specialty at JPMorgan was “Technical architecture oversight for planning, development, and operation of systems for fixed income securities and interest rate derivatives.”
Two young employees engaged in computer technology dying in such a short span of time might seem bizarre at a bank. But JPMorgan is not just any bank when it comes to computer technology. According to Anish Bhimani, the Chief Information Risk Officer at JPMorgan Chase, in an interview published at the Information Networking Institute (INI) at Carnegie Mellon, JPMorgan has “more software developers than Google, and more technologists than Microsoft…we get to build things at scale that have never been done before.”
Let that sink in for a moment: a bank that has “more software developers than Google.” The growing concern in Congress is that America’s biggest bank by assets is now so complex in terms of derivative risks on and off its books and software programs that are incomprehensible to its regulators, that it could pose systemic risk to the U.S. economy in a replay of the Citigroup debacle of 2008.
Six days after the death of Magee, Ryan Crane, an Executive Director involved in trading at JPMorgan’s New York office, was found dead in his home in Stamford, Connecticut on February 3. No cause of death or circumstances surrounding the death has been released to the public. The Chief Medical Examiner’s office will only say that the cause of death is “pending” and final results will not be announced for several more weeks. Wall Street On Parade called the Stamford Police last week to ask for the police incident report. Under Connecticut sunshine laws that report should be available to the press. We were informed that if we were able to obtain the incident report, most information would likely be redacted.
Crane’s death on February 3 was not reported by any major media until February 13, ten days later, when Bloomberg News ran a brief story.
On February 18 of last week, again reports emerged of many witnesses having seen a 33-year old JPMorgan employee jump from the rooftop of a 30-story office building, Chater House, in Hong Kong where JPMorgan leases space. No eyewitnesses have been identified by name.
The decedent’s age and the fact he was employed by JPMorgan is all that the media can agree on. The South China Morning Post, an English language newspaper in Hong Kong, has published four articles calling the deceased an “investment banker” and warning that stress in this job may lead to suicide. The South China Morning Post’s competitor in Hong Kong, The Standard, also an English language newspaper, reports that the employee is an accountant working in the finance department at JPMorgan – about as far removed from an investment banker as one could get.
The man’s name has been reported by various media in all of the ***owing incarnations: Dennis Li, Li Junjie, Dennis Li Jun Jie, and Dennis Lee.
Despite four emails to Joe Evangelisti, a Managing Director and spokesperson for JPMorgan, Evangelisti would not provide the name and job title for the deceased employee, saying only that “Our HK team communicated with reporters late last week on this. Here’s the Bloomberg story.” The Bloomberg story provided by Evangelisti was seven sentences long and does not appear on the U.S. web site of Bloomberg News. The earlier story by Bloomberg News, circulated further at the San Francisco Chronicle, depicted the employee as a “foreign exchange trader” citing the (wait for it) South China Morning Post.
When Wall Street On Parade pointed out via email to Evangelisti that under Fair Disclosure rules (Reg FD) a publicly traded company in the U.S. has an obligation to issue its press releases to everyone at the same time and that we would like a direct statement from him on the employee’s name and job title (not another media outlet’s interpretation of JPMorgan’s statement), Wall Street On Parade heard no further from Evangelisti, despite openly copying the media relations folks at the Securities and Exchange Commission on the entire email thread.
The New York Post pointed out in its reporting that there is “no other known link between any of the deaths” outside of the individuals working for the same company. In fact, there are numerous links: all of the men are in their 30s, while according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the expected longevity in 2011 for a U.S. male is 76.3 years. All of the men are believed to have been covered by a life insurance policy which pays JPMorgan upon the death of its employees. (Insurance experts say that larger death benefits can be obtained on younger, highly skilled workers because the death benefit is a function of the number of years of lost earnings.)
But perhaps the most important link is this: three weeks before the death of Salais and within a little more than a month of the other deaths, JPMorgan had been put under a form of probation by the U.S. Justice Department. In exchange for a Deferred Prosecution Agreement that ran for two years and $1.7 billion in fines to avoid the criminal indictment of individuals and the firm for facilitating the largest financial fraud in U.S. history, Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, JPMorgan was forced to agree to “secure the attendance and truthful statements or testimony of any past or current officers, agents, or employees at any meeting or interview or before the grand jury…provide in a responsive and prompt fashion, and upon request, on an expedited schedule, all documents, records, information and other evidence in JPMorgan’s possession, custody or control as may be requested by the Office, the FBI, or designated governmental agency…bring to the Office’s attention all criminal conduct by JPMorgan or any of its employees…commit no crimes under the federal laws of the United States subsequent to the execution of this Agreement.”
When a rash of sudden deaths occur among a most unlikely cohort of 30-year olds at a bank that has just settled felony charges and been put on notice that it will be indicted if it commits any further felonies; when it is currently under investigation on multiple continents for potentially committing criminal acts in the realm of interest rate and/or foreign exchange rigging — for the press to cavalierly call these deaths “non suspicious” before inquests have been conducted and findings released by medical examiners shows an unseemly indifference to a worker’s life and an alarming insensitivity to the grief stricken families still searching for answers.
Gugliano
En la noche del domingo 15 de diciembre del año pasado, seis semanas antes del inicio de la última ola de trágicas muertes de hombres jóvenes entre los 30 empleados de JPMorgan, la policía de Pearland, Texas recibieron una llamada de una persona en peligro fuera de un Walgreens Farmacia en 6122 Broadway en Pearland. El individuo en apuros era Jason Alan Salais, un especialista de 34 años Tecnología de la Información que había trabajado en JPMorgan Chase desde mayo de 2008.
Un miembro de la familia confirmó a Wall Street en desfile que Salais murió de un ataque al corazón en la misma tarde el informe de la angustia se fue a la policía. La incidencia de infarto de miocardio o el infarto de miocardio entre los hombres de 20 a 39 años es la mitad del uno por ciento de la población, según el Centro Nacional de Estadísticas de Salud y Instituto Nacional del Corazón, los Pulmones y la Sangre, en base a los datos de 2007 a 2010, marcando esto como otra fin inusual de JPMorgan.
Una persona que se identificó como Dave Steiner escribió lo siguiente acerca de Salais en el libro de condolencias en línea proporcionada por la funeraria: "Mi más sentido pésame a toda su familia por el fallecimiento repentino de Jason. Cuando tuve el placer de entrevistar a Jason de ser parte del equipo de JP Morgan en 2008, estaba claro para mí en tan sólo unos pocos minutos de que era un hombre de carácter, inteligencia, ética de trabajo, la bondad y la integridad. En los años siguientes, y hasta la triste noticia de esta semana, yo era testigo de su arduo trabajo, las amistades que construyó, historias de su amada familia y, por supuesto, el béisbol ... "
De acuerdo con el perfil de LinkedIn para Salais, lo contrataron a Client Technology Service "L3 Operar Support" y anteriormente "FXO Operar Soporte L2" en JPMorgan. Antes de incorporarse a JPMorgan en 2008, Salais había trabajado como técnico de Software de Cliente en SunGard y Analista de Sistemas UNIX en Logix Comunicaciones.
Seis semanas después de la repentina fin de Salais, Gabriel Magee, vicepresidente de 39 años que también se dedicaba a la Tecnología de la Información en JPMorgan, esta vez en Londres, murió en circunstancias muy sospechosas. Una investigación forense en el asunto se llevará a cabo el 15 de mayo en Londres.
Los familiares y amigos dicen que Magee era un hombre feliz, saludable y vibrante joven que envía por correo electrónico a su novia en la noche del 27 de enero al decir que él estaba terminando en el trabajo y estaría en casa pronto. Cuando no llegó, su novia notificó a la policía y llamó a los hospitales locales. De acuerdo con la Policía Metropolitana de Londres, alrededor de las 8:02 am de la mañana siguiente, los trabajadores que miran hacia fuera las ventanas vieron el cuerpo de Magee acostado en una azotea de nivel 9 ª que sobresalía de la de 33 pisos edificio de JPMorgan en la sección de Canary Wharf de Londres .
Periódicos de Londres de inmediato llamaron a la fin fue un suicidio, en un principio lo que sugiere que miles de viajeros habían visto Magee saltar desde la azotea de nivel 33 º. Cuando Wall Street On Parade pulsa la Policía Metropolitana en el tema de los testigos reales que habían visto Magee salto, la Policía se alejó de la sugerencia de que la caída en realidad había sido observado por testigos oculares.
Magee trabajó en la sede europea de JPMorgan a 25 Bank Street en el barrio de Tower Hamlets. Dibujos y planes presentados por JPMorgan a la ciudad después de que compró el edificio de £ 495 millones en 2010, muestran que el techo 9 º piso es accesible "a través de la escalera desde el nivel 8 en el nivel existente 9 cercado de la central ..."
De acuerdo con el perfil de LinkedIn Magee, su área específica de la especialidad de JPMorgan era "Técnico supervisión arquitectura para la planificación, desarrollo y operación de los sistemas de valores de renta fija y derivados de tasas de interés."
Dos jóvenes empleados que participan en la tecnología informática de morir en un corto espacio de tiempo puede parecer extraño en un banco. Pero JPMorgan no es cualquier banco cuando se trata de la tecnología informática. De acuerdo con Anish Bhimani, el Jefe de Información de Riesgos de JPMorgan Chase, en una entrevista publicada en el Instituto y redes Información (INI) en el Carnegie Mellon , JP Morgan tiene "más desarrolladores de software que Google, y más tecnólogos que Microsoft ... llegamos a construir cosas a escala que nunca se han hecho antes. "
Deje que se hunden en un momento: un banco que tiene ". Más desarrolladores de software que Google" La preocupación cada vez mayor en el Congreso es que el mayor banco de Estados Unidos por activos es ahora tan complejo en términos de los riesgos derivados dentro y fuera de sus libros y programas de software que son incomprensibles para sus reguladores, que podría plantear un riesgo sistémico para la economía de EE.UU. en una repetición de la debacle de Citigroup de 2008.
Seis días después de la fin de Magee, Ryan Crane, un Director Ejecutivo que participan en el comercio en la oficina de JP Morgan de Nueva York, fue encontrado muerto en su casa de Stamford, Connecticut, el 3 de febrero. Ninguna causa de la fin o de las circunstancias que rodearon la fin ha sido liberado al público. La oficina del Jefe Médico Forense sólo decir que la causa de la fin está "pendiente", y los resultados finales no se darán a conocer durante varias semanas más. Wall Street en desfile llamó a la Policía de Stamford semana pasada para pedir el informe policial del incidente. Bajo las leyes de tras*parencia de Connecticut que reportan deben estar disponibles para la prensa. Se nos informó que si hemos sido capaces de obtener el informe del incidente, más información probablemente se redactó.
La fin de la grúa el 3 de febrero no se informó en los medios de comunicación principales, hasta el 13 de febrero de diez días más tarde, cuando Bloomberg News publicó una breve historia.
El 18 de febrero de la semana pasada, de nuevo surgieron informes de muchos testigos de haber visto un hombre de 33 años de edad JPMorgan salto empleado desde la azotea de un edificio de oficinas de 30 pisos, Chater House, en Hong Kong, donde JPMorgan arrienda espacio. No hay testigos oculares han sido identificados por su nombre.
La edad de la persona fallecida y el hecho de que él era empleado de JPMorgan es todo lo que los medios de comunicación pueden estar de acuerdo. El South China Morning Post, un periódico en idioma Inglés en Hong Kong, ha publicado cuatro artículos que llaman al fallecido un "banquero de inversión", y advierten que el estrés en este trabajo puede conducir al suicidio. Competidor The South China Morning Post de Hong Kong, The Standard, también un periódico en idioma Inglés, informa de que el empleado es un contador que trabaja en el departamento financiero de JPMorgan - tan lejos de la banca de inversión como se podría conseguir.
El nombre del hombre ha sido reportado por varios medios de comunicación en todas las siguientes encarnaciones: Dennis Li, Li Junjie, Dennis Li Jun Jie, y Dennis Lee.
A pesar de cuatro correos electrónicos a Joe Evangelisti, director gerente y portavoz de JPMorgan, Evangelisti no proporcionaría el nombre y puesto de trabajo para el empleado fallecido, y sólo dijo que "Nuestro equipo de HK se comunicó con los reporteros la semana pasada en este. Aquí está la historia de Bloomberg. "La historia de Bloomberg proporcionada por Evangelisti fue siete frases largas y no aparece en el sitio web de EE.UU. de Bloomberg News. La historia anterior por Bloomberg News , circuló más en el San Francisco Chronicle, representa al empleado como un "operador de divisas extranjeras", citando la (esperar a que) South China Morning Post.
Cuando Wall Street On Parade señalado por correo electrónico a Evangelisti que bajo las reglas de Fair Disclosure (Reg FD), una compañía que cotiza en bolsa en los EE.UU. tiene la obligación de emitir sus comunicados de prensa a todos al mismo tiempo y que nos gustaría una declaración directa de él en el nombre del empleado y el título del trabajo (interpretación no de otro medio de comunicación de la declaración de JPMorgan), Wall Street On Parade oirá más lejos de Evangelisti, a pesar copiando abiertamente a la gente de relaciones de medios de comunicación a la Comisión de Valores y Bolsas en todo el hilo de correo electrónico.
El New York Post señaló en su informe que "no hay otro vínculo conocido entre cualquiera de las muertes" fuera de las personas que trabajan para la misma empresa. De hecho, existen numerosos enlaces: todos los hombres están en sus 30s, mientras que de acuerdo con los Centros para el Control y la Prevención de Enfermedades, la longevidad esperada en 2011 para un varón EE.UU. es 76,3 años. Todos los hombres se cree que han sido cubiertos por una póliza de seguro de vida que paga JPMorgan tras la fin de sus empleados. (Los expertos en seguros dicen que los beneficios por fallecimiento de mayor tamaño se pueden obtener en jóvenes trabajadores altamente cualificados, ya que el beneficio por fin es una función del número de años de pérdida de ingresos.)
Pero tal vez el vínculo más importante es la siguiente: tres semanas antes de la fin de Salais y dentro de un poco más de un mes de las otras muertes, JPMorgan había sido puesto bajo una forma de libertad condicional por el Departamento de Justicia de EE.UU.. A cambio de un acuerdo de enjuiciamiento diferido que funcionó durante dos años y $ 1.7 mil millones en multas para evitar la acusación penal de los individuos y de la empresa para facilitar el mayor fraude financiero en la historia de EE.UU., el esquema Ponzi de Bernard Madoff, JP Morgan se vio obligado a ponerse de acuerdo para "asegurar las declaraciones o testimonios de las oficiales pasadas o actuales, agentes o empleados de cualquier reunión o entrevista o antes de que el gran jurado de asistencia y veraces ... proveen de una manera ágil y rápida, y que lo soliciten, en un calendario acelerado, todos los documentos, registros , información y otras pruebas en JPMorgan posesión, custodia o control, puede ser solicitada por la Oficina, el FBI, o agencia gubernamental designada ... llamar la atención de la Oficina de toda conducta criminal por parte de JPMorgan o cualquiera de sus empleados ... no cometer crímenes bajo la ley federal leyes de los Estados Unidos posteriores a la ejecución de este Acuerdo ".
Cuando una ola de muertes súbitas ocurren entre una cohorte más improbable de los 30 años de edad en un banco que acaba de instalarse cargos de felonía y ha puesto sobre aviso de que va a ser acusado si se comete algún delitos adicionales, cuando es actualmente objeto de investigación en varios continentes para potencialmente la comisión de actos delictivos en el ámbito de la tasa de interés y / o moneda extranjera aparejo - para la prensa para llamar caballerosamente estas muertes "no sospechoso" antes de que se han llevado a cabo investigaciones judiciales y los hallazgos liberado por los médicos forenses muestran una indiferencia indecoroso para un trabajador de vida y una insensibilidad alarmante para el dolor familias afectadas siguen buscando respuestas.