Following a brief late summer spell in which there was little if any news of bankers taking their lives, as reported previously, the banker suicides returned with a bang when none other than the hedge fund partner of infamous former IMF head Dominique Strauss-Khan, Thierry Leyne, a French-Israeli entrepreneur, was found dead after jumping off the 23rd floor of one of the Yoo towers, a prestigious residential complex in Tel Aviv.
Just a few brief hours later the WSJ reported that yet another Deutsche Bank veteran has committed suicide, and not just anyone but the bank’s associate general counsel, 41 year old Calogero “Charlie” Gambino, who was found on the morning of Oct. 20, having also hung himself by the neck from a stairway banister, which according to the New York Police Department was the cause of death. We assume that any relationship to the famous Italian family carrying that last name is purely accidental.
Here is his bio from a recent conference which he attended:
Charlie
J. Gambino is a Managing Director and Associate General Counsel in the
Regulatory, Litigation and Internal Investigation group for Deutsche
Bank in the Americas. Mr. Gambino served as a staff attorney in the
United Securities and Exchange Commission’s Division of Enforcement from
1997 to 1999. He also was associated with the law firm of Skadden,
Arps, Slate Meagher & Flom from 1999 to 2003. He is a frequent
speaker at securities law conferences. Mr. Gambino is a member of the
American Bar Association and the Association of the Bar of the City of
New York.
As a reminder, the other Deutsche Bank-er who was
found dead earlier in the year, William Broeksmit, was involved in the
bank’s risk function and advised the firm’s senior leadership; he was “anxious about various authorities investigating areas of the bank where he worked,”
according to written evidence from his psychologist, given Tuesday at
an inquest at London’s Royal Courts of Justice. And now that an almost
identical suicide by hanging has taken place at Europe’s most
systemically important bank, and by a person who worked in a nearly
identical function – to shield the bank from regulators and prosecutors
and cover up its allegedly illegal activities with settlements and fines
– is surely bound to raise many questions.The WSJ reports that Mr. Gambino had been “closely involved in negotiating legal issues for Deutsche Bank, including the prolonged probe into manipulation of the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, and ongoing investigations into manipulation of currencies markets, according to people familiar with his role at the bank.”
He previously was an associate at a private law firm and a regulatory enforcement lawyer from 1997 to 1999, according to his online LinkedIn profile and biographies for conferences where he spoke. But most notably, as his LinkedIn profile below shows, like many other Wall Street revolving door regulators, he started his career at the SEC itself where he worked from 1997 to 1999.
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