It doesn’t get any more Orwellian than this: Wall Street mega banks
crash the U.S. financial system in 2008. Hundreds of thousands of
financial industry workers lose their jobs. Then, beginning late last
year, a rash of suspicious deaths start to occur among current and
former bank employees. Next we learn that four of the Wall Street mega
banks likely hold over $680 billion face amount of life insurance on
their workers, payable to the banks, not the families. We ask their
Federal regulator for the details of this life insurance under a Freedom
of Information Act request and we’re told the information constitutes
“trade secrets.”
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the life expectancy of a 25 year old male
with a Bachelor’s degree or higher as of 2006 was 81 years of age. But
in the past five months, five highly educated JPMorgan male employees in
their 30s and one former employee aged 28, have died under suspicious
circumstances, including three of whom allegedly leaped off buildings – a
statistical rarity even during the height of the financial crisis in
2008.
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1 comment:
All these dead men stories are probably just that, "stories". They didn't die but instead have absconded to Israel where they are in hiding with all the money they stole to avoid any future prosecution ever! Watch........down the road they may just miracuously appear to be alive!
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