Wall Street banker dead at 35 wanted new job over grueling 100-hour work weeks: report
NY Post
The 35-year-old Bank of America investment banker who died of a blood clot earlier this month was looking for a new job at a different company due to the stress of working more than 100 hours a week, according to a report.
Leo Lukenas III, a former enlisted soldier turned junior banker who worked out of Bank of America’s offices in Midtown Manhattan, contacted an executive recruiter about a new job before he died on May 2 of what the medical examiners called an acute coronary artery thrombus, Reuters reported on Wednesday.
Douglas Walters, a managing partner at GrayFox Recruitment, told Reuters that Lukenas informed him in mid-March that he wanted to leave Bank of America because of the grueling hours.
GrayFox Recruitment is a firm that specializes in placing people in financial industry jobs such as investment banking and private equity.
Walters told Reuters that Lukenas, who left behind a wife and two small children, did not raise any health issues in their discussions about career options.
The former Green Beret told Walters he thrived in a competitive culture and “would never say no” to assignments, Walters recalled.