DID A BANK ASSOCIATE IN US DIE AFTER WORKING 120-HOUR WEEKS? WHAT WE KNOW

Overwork led to an associate at a major investment bank in the US die? Several people have come up with claims online that the employee was made to work 120 hours a week, more than double the time of what is legally bound. Those making allegations blame the investment bank for trying to silence their voice by censoring them or getting posts removed, a claim that cannot be verified. The man who died was a veteran (a former Green Beret) and he was working on a deal in the Financial Institutions Group (FIG) sector.

Times Now is avoiding mentioning the bank, employee, and manager's names until confirmation is received. However, a dedicated post online on a betting platform is asking people whether the employee was killed by the management or not. And, in fact, four people have traded on it as well. The post can be accessed by directing to the manifold.market's page. Another page based on a discussion within the financial community alleged that some of the bank's employees were planning to go on a strike.

The unverified employee is demanding to fire the head of FIG along with the COO of their Americas demand. All such allegations plus unsubstantiated claims are being made anonymously. The alleged employee is demanding a new policy for juniors at the bank.

A report by efinancialcareers.com added that the associate concerned had a wife and child and joined the bank through the Veteran's program. Some social posts on Reddit went on to claim that the deceased employee kept awake with energy drinks and worked 120 hours a week for four consecutive weeks. The reason for death remains unknown and the claims unsubstantiated. It's early to claim on record that he passed away from overwork.

The family members, loved ones, and relatives of the associate have asked for privacy as they mourn the demise of the unidentified employee.

2024-05-06T03:08:42Z dg43tfdfdgfd