Gabriel Magee
JPMorgan Chase Vice President who fell from the roof of the bank's Canary Wharf headquarters in London during a cluster of suspicious banker deaths in early 2014.

| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Gabriel Magee |
| Born | ~1975 |
| Died | January 28, 2014 |
| Age at Death | 39 |
| Location of Death | JPMorgan headquarters, 25 Bank Street, Canary Wharf, London |
| Cause of Death | Fall from upper floor of building; struck 9th-floor rooftop |
| Official Ruling | Suicide |
| Category | Banking / Finance |
Assessment: SUSPICIOUS
Gabriel Magee was a vice president in JPMorgan Chase's Corporate & Investment Bank technology division who fell from the roof of the bank's European headquarters in Canary Wharf on January 28, 2014. His death was ruled a suicide at a May 2014 inquest. Magee's death occurred during a striking cluster of banker deaths in early 2014 -- William Broeksmit of Deutsche Bank was found hanged two days earlier on January 26. JPMorgan was Jeffrey Epstein's primary bank from 1998 to 2013, processing over $1 billion in transactions that were later flagged as suspicious. Magee worked in the fixed income technology systems that would have handled data related to exactly these types of transactions.
Circumstances of Death
On January 28, 2014, at approximately 8:00 a.m. GMT, Gabriel Magee's body was found on the 9th-floor rooftop of JPMorgan's 33-story headquarters at 25 Bank Street in Canary Wharf, London's financial district. Police were called at 8:02 a.m. and he was pronounced dead at the scene.
The subsequent inquest, conducted by coroner Mary Hassell in May 2014, heard evidence from Magee's girlfriend, a work colleague, his therapist, a police officer, and JPMorgan employees. Swipe card records showed Magee had attempted to access the roof and upper floors on at least two prior occasions, beginning in November 2013. Notes found on his computer were described as hinting at suicidal ideation. The coroner concluded that "Gabriel jumped off the 32nd floor with the intention of killing himself."
The inquest also revealed that Magee had a blood alcohol level approximately three times the UK drink-driving limit at the time of his death, according to IBTimes UK.
Background
Magee had worked at JPMorgan since 2004 -- a ten-year tenure spanning the entirety of the bank's most controversial period with Epstein. He was a vice president in the Corporate & Investment Bank's technology arm, where his role involved the "planning, development, and operation of systems for fixed income securities and interest rate derivatives," according to his professional profile reported by eFinancialCareers.
JPMorgan Chase served as Jeffrey Epstein's primary bank from 1998 to 2013. During this period, the bank processed over $1 billion in transactions later flagged as suspicious. In 2023, JPMorgan paid $290 million to settle a class action lawsuit brought by Epstein's victims and an additional $75 million to settle with the U.S. Virgin Islands. A November 2025 analysis released by Senator Ron Wyden's office detailed how top JPMorgan executives enabled Epstein's sex trafficking operation, according to the Senate Finance Committee.
Bank compliance officers had raised alarms about Epstein's transactions, but executives reportedly overrode their concerns. The bank filed retroactive suspicious activity reports covering nearly $1.3 billion in transactions after Epstein's death in 2019 -- a figure nearly 300 times larger than the $4.3 million flagged while Epstein was alive, according to NBC News.
Magee's death was part of a broader pattern. Wall Street on Parade documented that in the six months surrounding Magee's death, five current and two former JPMorgan employees died under unusual circumstances, with three deaths involving alleged falls from buildings.
Why This Death Possibly Raises Questions
- Magee worked in JPMorgan's fixed income technology systems for a decade overlapping exactly with the bank's relationship with Epstein (1998-2013), meaning he would have had potential access to transaction data and systems that processed Epstein-related funds.
- His death occurred just two days after William Broeksmit, a senior Deutsche Bank executive, was found hanged in London -- part of an unusual cluster of banker deaths in early 2014.
- Wall Street on Parade reported that JPMorgan experienced an anomalous number of employee deaths in this period, with five current workers dying in six months.
- JPMorgan was later found to have processed over $1 billion in suspicious Epstein transactions and paid $365 million in settlements to victims and the USVI.
- The bank had deep institutional ties to intelligence agencies, a connection explored by Wall Street on Parade in a February 2014 article titled "JPMorgan Vice President's Death in London Shines a Light on the Bank's Close Ties to the CIA."
The Counterargument
- The coroner heard testimony from multiple witnesses and ruled the death a suicide based on evidence including swipe card records, computer notes, and witness statements.
- Magee had been seeing a therapist, suggesting pre-existing mental health concerns.
- He had a high blood alcohol level at the time of death.
- Swipe card data showed he had attempted to access the roof on prior occasions, suggesting premeditation rather than a spontaneous act or external force.
- No direct evidence has linked Magee personally to Epstein's accounts or any whistleblower activity.
Key Quotes from Media Coverage
"Gabriel jumped off the 32nd floor with the intention of killing himself."
-- Coroner Mary Hassell, May 2014 inquest ruling (Irish Times)
"In the space of just six months in late 2013 and early 2014, five current workers and two former workers at JPMorgan died under unusual circumstances, three from alleged leaps off buildings."
-- Wall Street on Parade (Wall Street on Parade)
"The suspicious death of a JPMorgan Vice President, Gabriel Magee, is under investigation in London... He had worked for J.P. Morgan for 10 years."
-- Wall Street on Parade, February 2014 (Wall Street on Parade)
See Also
- William Broeksmit -- Deutsche Bank executive found hanged in London on January 26, 2014, two days before Magee's death
- Val Broeksmit -- Son of William Broeksmit; became Deutsche Bank whistleblower and FBI informant; found dead in 2022
- Jeffrey Epstein -- JPMorgan's most notorious client from 1998 to 2013
Sources
- Wall Street on Parade: Suspicious Death of JPMorgan Vice President Gabriel Magee Under Investigation
- Wall Street on Parade: The Inquest of JPMorgan VP Gabriel Magee
- Wall Street on Parade: Banking Deaths -- Why JPMorgan Stands Out
- Wall Street on Parade: JPMorgan Vice President's Death Shines a Light on the Bank's Close Ties to the CIA
- CBS News: JP Morgan Executive Gabriel Magee in "Non-Suspicious" Fatal Fall
- Irish Times: JP Morgan Exec Killed Himself Leaping from UK Building, Inquest Rules
- IBTimes UK: JP Morgan Suicide -- Gabriel Magee Three Times Drink-Driving Limit
- NBC News: JPMorgan Allegedly Notified Government of $1 Billion in Suspicious Transactions by Epstein
- Senate Finance Committee: Wyden Releases New Analysis of JPMorgan's Role in Epstein Operation
This information was built by Grok and Claude AI research.
Status: Deceased (2014)