Senior Deutsche Bank AG regulatory lawyer Calogero Gambino has been found dead in New York after committing suicide, New York City officials said on Saturday.
Gambino, 41, was found on Monday morning at his home in the New York borough of Brooklyn and pronounced dead on the scene, according to New York City police.
Gambino was an associate general counsel and a managing director who worked for the German bank for 11 years, according to the Wall Street Journal.
He had been closely involved in negotiating legal issues for Deutsche Bank such as a probe by regulators of banks over allegations they manipulated the LIBOR benchmark interest rate as well as currency markets.
Gambino was also an associate at a private law firm and a regulatory enforcement lawyer between 1997 and 1999, the Journal said, citing Gambino’s LinkedIn profile and conference biographies.
He died by hanging, New York City Office of Chief Medical Examiner spokeswoman Julie Bolcer said.
“Charlie was a beloved and respected colleague who we will miss,” Deutsche Bank said in a statement.
Deutsche, Germany’s biggest lender, has already paid 6 billion euros (US$7.7 billion) in fines and settlements in the past two-and-a-half years.
It expects to post litigation costs of 894 million euros alone for the third quarter of this year.
Earlier this year, former Deutsche Bank manager William Broeksmit, who had close ties to co-chief executive Anshu Jain, had been found dead at his London home in what also appeared to have been a suicide.
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