Reuters
Rockefeller & Co's CEO committed suicide: report
Tue Sep 15, 2009
(Reuters) - James McDonald, chief executive officer of investment management firm Rockefeller & Co, committed suicide on Sunday in Massachusetts, the Wall Street Journal said, citing people familiar with the matter.
According to the paper, Barclay McFadden, who identified himself as a friend of McDonald's family, said James McDonald "took his own life." McDonald was also a board member of NYSE Euronext.
No one at Rockefeller & Co was immediately available for comment.
The paper said McDonald is believed to have died in New Bedford but the circumstances surrounding his death were unclear.
Rockefeller & Co's chief operating officer and chief financial officer, Austin Shapard, has assumed day-to-day leadership of the investment firm, the Journal said, citing company spokesman Joseph Kuo.
The firm, which started off as a New York family office established by John D. Rockefeller, was incorporated in 1979 and became an investment adviser in 1980, according to the company's website.
(Reporting by Santosh Nadgir in Bangalore; Editing by Greg Mahlich)
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LA Times
Newport Beach financier Danny Pang dies at 42
September 12, 2009

Newport Beach financier Danny Pang died early Saturday at a local hospital, according to the Orange County coroner’s office. The cause of death has not been determined and an autopsy is planned for Sunday, said Larry Esslinger, supervising deputy coroner.
Police officers were dispatched to Pang’s home in the 2600 block of Crestview Drive about 3:30 p.m. Friday on a “medical assistance call,” said Sgt. Doug Jones of the Newport Beach Police Department.
Pang was pronounced dead at Hoag Memorial Hospital at 5:12 a.m. Saturday, Esslinger said. He had no further details.
The 42-year-old Pang has been accused by the government of operating a Ponzi scheme and of taking at least $83 million in inflated fees, salary and loans from his investment firm before it was seized by federal regulators in April. He had denied wrongdoing.
[Updated, 3:40 p.m.: Esslinger said no further investigation is planned.
In a statement, Charles Sipkins, a spokesman for Pang, said, “Our entire family is shocked by Danny’s sudden and tragic passing. Danny was a wonderful husband, loving father, and an honest businessman.
“For the past five months, Danny was subjected to a relentless attack of innuendo and false allegations,” he added, “and was denied the opportunity to defend himself.”
Pang’s notoriety in the financial world began its steep descent earlier this year.
A federal criminal indictment in July accused Pang of structuring hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash transactions in 2007 to avoid scrutiny from the government. He had pleaded not guilty. Those charges were similar to allegations that federal prosecutors filed against Pang in April.
The indictment came as Pang faced a civil lawsuit from the Securities and Exchange Commission accusing him of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from investors -- primarily Taiwanese banks -- through his Irvine-based Private Equity Management Group.
Pang first made headlines in 1997 when his 33-year-old wife, a former stripper named Janie, was shot to death in the couple’s Villa Park home.
Pang denied involvement in his wife’s murder and was never charged. Pang’s attorney, Hugh “Randy” McDonald, was charged in the slaying.
Orange County prosecutors accused McDonald of killing Janie Pang, staging a fake suicide from the Golden Gate Bridge and then going into hiding. A jury was unable to reach a verdict, and prosecutors elected not to pursue a second trial.
Sipkins, in commenting on Pang’s protracted legal problems said: “It is distressing that Danny had to endure such a mean-spirited assault on his character and reputation, and the seizure of all this property without ever having been found liable of anything and without ever having a chance to defend himself." ]
-- Ruben Vives and Louis Sahagun
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Inquisitr
Financier Finn Casperson dead in apparent suicide
September 9, 2009

Ex-CEO of Beneficial Corp. Finn H.W. Casperson was found dead in an apparent suicide behind an office building in Westerly, Rhode Island.
Casperson, 67, was discovered dead of what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound on September 7th, after police were asked to “check on” him. Casperson came from a wealthy family and moved with powerful people, and he was known for his political influence, fundraising and philanthropy.
Family members, including his son, Bedminster Township Committeeman Finn M.W. Caspersen Jr., declined to comment on the death of Casperson, Sr. or the circumstances surrounding his demise. In addition to philanthropic ventures, Casperson was an accomplished equestrian, and fellow movers and shakers have commented to press on his legacy:
“Finn was always a gentleman and always made his resources available,” said Rhode Island state Senator Dennis Algiere, who represents the seaside region, just across the state line from Connecticut. “He was a very charitable individual. He donated a lot of time and money to various organizations in our community over the years.”
“I don’t think you could find someone more philanthropic or caring,” said Tucker Johnson, an equestrian and a friend of Caspersen’s, according to a statement on an equestrian Web site.
[Source: Bloomberg]
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CNN
Dying Blagojevich fundraiser said he overdosed, mayor says
September 14, 2009

CHICAGO, Illinois (CNN) -- Police are investigating the death of the former chief fundraiser for ex-Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich as a "death-suicide," an Illinois mayor said Sunday.
Christopher Kelly, 51, was former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich's chief fundraiser.
Financier Christopher Kelly told police shortly before he died Saturday that he took an "overdose of drugs," said Dwight Welch, mayor of Country Club Hills, Illinois.
Country Club Hills police found several drugs in Kelly's black 2007 Cadillac Escalade, but they were not sure yet whether they were prescribed, Welch said. Country Club Hills is about 27 miles south of Chicago.
Kelly had recently undergone surgery and was taking drugs following the operation, Welch said. Welch said he did not know which drugs Kelly was taking.
Kelly, 51, of Burr Ridge, Illinois, was pronounced dead at Stroger hospital in Cook County at 10:46 a.m. Saturday, hospital spokesman Marcel Bright told CNN.
Autopsy results were expected Sunday afternoon, Welch said. The Cook County Medical Examiner's Office did not comment on the results, but said that a ruling on Kelly's death was "pending further studies."
Toxicology results won't be available for "some time," Welch said.
Blagojevich blamed the government for Kelly's death.
"I don't know any more than you know, except that a friend of mine took his life because he refused to submit to the pressure by the government to lie about me," Blagojevich told CNN. "And to think that it comes to something like that begs a lot of questions."
Blagojevich said his statement that Kelly "took his life" was based on what he had read in news reports.
Earlier this year, Blagojevich, who was impeached and removed from office, pleaded not guilty to federal corruption charges.
A federal grand jury in April indicted him on 16 felony counts, including racketeering, conspiracy, wire fraud and making false statements to investigators. The indictment also named Kelly.
On Tuesday in a separate case, Kelly pleaded guilty to two counts of mail fraud "in a kickback scheme to bring in $8.5 million in business at O'Hare International Airport to his roofing company," the Chicago Tribune reported on its Web site Sunday. Kelly was to begin a prison sentence this week, the Tribune reported.
Kelly was transferred to Stroger hospital after first receiving care at Oak Forest Hospital, near Country Club Hills, where police spoke to him at about 3:30 a.m. CT Saturday, Welch said. Police described Kelly as being "very hesitant, very ill" during that interview, Welch said.
As part of their investigation, police want to talk further with Kelly's girlfriend, Clarissa Flores-Buhelos, Welch said at a news conference Sunday. Kelly and Flores-Buhelos, 30, communicated via text messages before she drove from Chicago to pick him up, Welch said. She found him ill and drove him in his car to Oak Forest Hospital, he said.
She told police that Kelly had attempted suicide, Welch said.
But since then, Flores-Buhelos has retained a lawyer and is not talking to police, Welch said. Police plan to use the text messages and the GPS device in Kelly's car to determine where the two were prior to arriving at the hospital.
Police also want to talk to a man who came to Oak Forest Hospital to pick up Kelly's car, Welch said. He has keys to the vehicle but the car has been confiscated by the police as evidence, Welch said.
Chicago police and the FBI are also involved in the investigation, Welch said.
CNN's Jesse Solomon and Justin Lear contributed to this report.
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