Business

JPMorgan exec had high blood alcohol level before plunge

A JPMorgan technology expert who fell to his death from the bank’s 33-story tower in London’s Canary Wharf financial district had a high level of alcohol in his system before he died, an inquest heard on Tuesday.

Gabriel Magee, 39, a vice president with JPMorgan’s corporate and investment bank technology arm, plunged from the building in January, hitting a lower, ninth-floor roof, where he was pronounced dead.

The inquest heard written evidence from a senior toxicologist that Magee was found to have had an alcohol level nearly three times the legal driving limit.

Mark Gibbons, a friend and colleague, said that although he had seemed happy at the time of his death, there had been a previous incident in New York in which Magee had sent an email along the lines that he “couldn’t handle this” before disappearing for a short while.

However, when he reappeared, he seemed fine, the inquest heard, although he had had a difficult time last August when a project he had been working on was not going well.

The inquest also heard from several witnesses that Magee had been upset in early 2013, a year before his death, when he split up with his girlfriend.

“He was very depressed … he would be sobbing uncontrollably, and then laughing hysterically — he had paranoias about all sorts of things, a lot of them directed at me or things around me,” the ex-girlfriend, Lucy Pinches, told the court.

She added that Magee had had thoughts about life in another universe that she did not understand and that he had continually refused help from those close to him.