Freddie Mac Chief Commits Suicide

// added April 22, 2009 // 84 comments //
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The acting head of Freddie Mac, David Kellerman, has committed suicide.
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84 comments // Freddie Mac Chief Commits Suicide

  • islek
    • 0
      islek  
    • As bad as any failure may be, it's not worth the cost of taking one's own life. The economy sucks, but this is much more sad to me. Does anyone really think a family cares more about the state of the economy than losing a loved one? I wish scapegoats weren't such a media staple... it makes people feel like they have to carry giant burdens and the blame all on their own.

    • 10 months ago
  • marklemagne
  • Mark701
    • 0
      Mark701  
    • I blog allot on MarketWatch and those guys were out and out freaky about this. There were close to 1000 comments on the suicide and MW deleted at least 10% of them. They even delete my comment about their deletions!

    • 10 months ago
  • pinkerbelle
  • Kylsport
  • plusaf
  • UrbanGypsy
    • 0
      UrbanGypsy  
    • Suicide sucks. Why would you take your own life? Wow, thats a big decison, to decide to not exist... Crazy.

      Feel bad for him. A person just like all of us...

    • 10 months ago
  • Robroy1
    • 0
      Robroy1  
    • It will all come out sooner or later Whatever happens, God rest his soul. And yep USWGO where do you come up with this absurd s___t.

    • 10 months ago
  • holyshiite
  • barbara3d
    • 0
      barbara3d  
    • I just attended a disturbing inservice this morning held by the CSI-type "Medical Examiner" of our county.

      She told us that hundreds are committing suicide over the past year or so. We don't hear much about most of them because the family requests privacy and it is usually respected.

      Remember when Enron went down? one of the top guys did the same thing. Only I seem to remember he parked his car and shot himself in the head (?) There is so much crime today, hard to keep up.

      I too agree that a lot of people today are cold, callous and unforgiving even to people that really don't know at all, and especially don't know the truth about why they did it. I call it the "computer age". You can sit her and mouth all manner of judgements, vicious hatred, and a total lack of empathy even for people who for whatever reason felt there was "no way out".

      I am not a Bible thumper as they say but I do believe this verse:

      Judge not lest ye be judged. Also, let the person without sin cast the first stone.

    • 10 months ago
  • Marilynn_Murray
  • lj111
  • cmauer42
  • GLiz
    • 0
      GLiz  
    • I wonder if i should be shocked or not? Here we are in a critical time of US history and the people who are in position of making changed just freak out. This is patheic. NO one is perfect, we all are make mistakes. Suicide is never the answer to solve our problems.

    • 10 months ago
  • ErnesToe123
  • Boognished
  • Mobius2012
  • ZinaDude
  • plusaf
  • bailey78
  • malathion
  • cztheday
    • 0
      cztheday  
    • Statement from Freddy Mac, for what it is worth:

      STATEMENT BY JOHN KOSKINEN, FREDDIE MAC INTERIM CEO, ON THE DEATH OF DAVID KELLERMANN, FREDDIE MAC ACTING CFO

      The Freddie Mac family is truly saddened by the news this morning of David Kellermann’s death. We extend our deepest condolences to David’s family and loved ones for this terrible personal tragedy.

      David was a man of great talents. He dedicated those talents to Freddie Mac for more than 16 years, serving in many business and finance capacities before recently taking the reins as acting chief financial officer. His extraordinary work ethic and integrity inspired all who worked with him. But he will be most remembered for his affability, his personal warmth, his sense of humor and his quick wit. David was a friend to many in the Freddie Mac family, and we mourn his passing.

    • 10 months ago
  • cztheday
    • 0
      cztheday  
    • Wow. I see a number of the contributors today had a full breakfast of self-righteousness today. I am fascinated that people are calling him a coward who know virtually nothing about him. If he was suffering from clinical depression, then he was enduring a level of hopelessness and despair that cannot even be imagined by people who have never suffered from that affliction. He may also have been suffering from some advanced form of disease, like cancer. He may have been suffering from both.

      The article says he was the "acting" head of Freddie Mac, so he had replaced the CEO but had not been given that job permanently. So whatever his previous role at the company was (CFO -- but for how long?), he was not THE guy in charge during any wrongdoing at the company that might come to light.

      But even if it turns out that he had done bad things and his feelings of guilt and remorse drove him to kill himself, are people REALLY that completely unsympathetic? IF that was the case, whatever bad decisions he had made were clearly eating him alive.

      The man made a mistake (or mistakes), but he also clearly had a conscience. I don't mean to pontificate -- I am no saint; but I can at least appreciate this guy over somebody like Madoff, who thumbs his nose at the world and appears to feel entirely justified in crushing the hopes and dreams of people who were trusting enough to invest their money with him.

      And of course, this man almost certainly had a family who cared about him and who would have forgiven him and helped him to rehabilitate himself IF he had done some bad things. I don't know the details of his life, yet, but I am guessing that in him someone has lost a son, a husband, a father and perhaps even a grandfather. Others have lost a friend.

      Maybe I am completely out in left field, but I just don't see how this event could provide "satisfaction" or "triumph" for anyone. Whatever was bad about this man is gone, but anything that was good about him is gone, too. And one cannot help being sad for those who cared about him.

    • 10 months ago
  • titvol
  • keithponder
  • carmalite
    • 0
      carmalite  
    • Looks like one of them took Sen. Grassely's advice. Grassely said they should do like the Japanese and commit suicide and later apologized. Evidently the Wall Street cabal does not has as great a conscience as this man. But then psycopaths don't have consciences.

    • 10 months ago
  • titvol
  • carmalite
  • malathion
    • 0
      malathion  
    • when i heard this on the news i thought it was a "bad" joke with good timing . then when i heard it was actual i took in a nice deep breath , and slowly exhaled while savoring the beauty of it's reality .

    • 10 months ago
  • hanna878
  • jfill
  • keithponder
    • 0
      keithponder  
    • William Casey, Ron Brown,Ken Lay, now David Kellerman and so many others just conveniently just disappear before they are summon to testify.

      You can believe this is you want to.

      I'll sell you 1 million bucks for half price ?

    • 10 months ago
  • Betico
  • Cargmac
  • banditalamode
  • mistigrist
  • titvol
  • InformedTexan
  • jeckersly316
  • carmalite
    • 0
      carmalite  
    • jeckersly316:

      We don't know what really happened, do we? He could have been killed because of certain financial illegalilties that he knew about and no one wanted him to talk.
      Or he could have been really depressed. We really don't know.

    • 10 months ago
  • humanpasta
  • Gozy
    • 0
      Gozy  
    • humanpasta:

      I feel better personally, I don't know about you. I might make it out of bed today and actually do some real work. If bad and/or stupid people everywhere would all do this the world would be a much better place.

    • 10 months ago
  • Gozy
  • igordy
  • Gozy
  • cmdinc
    • 0
      cmdinc  
    • Gozy:

      i stubbed my toe this morning, let's blame Bush for that. And my son's baseball practice got cancelled for rain yesterday, lets blame bush. I need to change my oil in my truck, lets blame bush..................anything else i can blame him for...and when does the blame start going to Oblunder??

    • 10 months ago
  • Gozy
  • eden49
  • cmdinc
  • madjik68
    • 0
      madjik68  
    • The lack of details surrounding this man's death seams a little suspicious. I think there are certain people that would not have wanted this man to divulge what really happened at Freddie Mac.

    • 10 months ago
  • MinneapolisMafia
  • photochick
  • Gaia666
    • 0
      Gaia666  
    • Mr. Kellerman had discovered an incriminating "error" in Freddie Mac's books and was extended two options. Cover up the error, or step down and "forget" about what he knew. Mr. Kellerman refused both options so the choice was made for him.

    • 10 months ago
  • amlilui
  • Gozy
  • Alanisnotcool
  • Kuklamania
  • barbara3d
  • thornman
  • Maeveeo
  • scabbio
  • carmalite
  • Gozy
    • 0
      Gozy  
    • If was about to get exposed for illegal actions and did not want to go to "pound me in the ass prison" I guess that was his only option. If he did this due to a change in life style shame on him!

    • 10 months ago
  • clownpuncher
  • Gozy
  • eden49
  • N008
    • N008  
    • This comment has been removed.
  • uberdeft
    • 0
      uberdeft  
    • I like how the new interim ceo described it as "his passing." Dude murdered himself. Just so we are clear in my opinion ceo's and politicians are nothing more than sanitizers.

    • 10 months ago
  • TheDesertEagle
  • carmalite
  • Incredulous
  • network_admin
  • eldamon
  • RazC
  • nursediesel
    • 0
      nursediesel  
    • Maybe he had a conscience.
      He was handed the mess someone else created.
      To know the economic problems that effect so many and influenced by decisions made in your company must be daunting to say the least.
      Maybe he was privy to more facts in the last two years he headed the company that really hit home, and he was unable to handle it for so many reasons. Such responsibiliy without the authority to help fix it because 'big brother' now pulls the strings must be frustrating.
      He was given the post after the last guy left his mark, maybe he saw it was useless to try to fight all the influences and just took the easy way out.
      Such a tragedy.

    • 10 months ago
  • Mark701
    • 0
      Mark701  
    • nursediesel:

      There is also a high probability his suicide had nothing to do with Freddie Mac. He could have had mental health issues, maybe he got videotaped with a hooker. We'll just have to sit back and wait for some answers.

    • 10 months ago
  • Mark701
    • 0
      Mark701  
    • Kind of a stretch USWGO. Chances are this guy committed suicide because he was deeply involved in instituting the policies that led to the Freddie Mac disaster. It's sad but it also makes me angry. People like him were willing to do anything they could to game the system to make an imaginary profit, but when the shit hits the fan, he kills himself. Sorry, but thats cowardice.

    • 10 months ago
  • USWGO
    • 0
      USWGO  
    • Mark701:

      Well hes a pon in the system because the economic crises was engineered by inflating the currency so the rich needed more money to stay safe from the massive inflation which made money less worth then the trees and copper to make them, so it's getting better just to illegally melt down the pennies into copper because of the devaluation of the dollar.

      Thats the first step to creating the NWO, the 2nd is to muddy up the water and cause mass confusion to which the truth is hard to find in the mess of lies, then the third step is shutting down the Internet after a false flag terrorist attack and covert communications are all shut down by the power of the federal government and any covert communications still here are being spied on by rebel spies.

      4th stage is to kill people who will not follow the NWO.

    • 10 months ago
  • BigJoeSixPack
  • eden49
  • USWGO
    • 0
      USWGO  
    • This is sad, the NWO is getting closer to succeeding they just need all the CEOs to kill themselves so everything becomes government controlled like socialism but more like communism because you'll have no right to freedom of speech or even throwing tea party protests.

    • 10 months ago
  • AswegoAsdego
  • carmalite
    • 0
      carmalite  
    • USWGO:

      The Tea baggers were not put in FREE SPEECH PENS like the Bush administration put every single person who was protesting anything at all.
      Stop lieing to yourself and everyone else! Bush did more to squash free speech than anyone but Nixon and Agnew.
      The Tea baggers got their day and they were not in a free speech fenced area like Bush used.

    • 10 months ago
  • DrGlass
    • 0
      DrGlass  
    • USWGO:

      The Government and the people are the same thing. You are the Government. I am the Government. We all just need to take a more active role. If there were a NWO they would love people like you. Open your eyes.

    • 10 months ago
  • bmw635
  • Maeveeo
    • 0
      Maeveeo  
    • Whatever he knew he took with him ( it must be bad )
      just goes to show ya ! whatever that means , but i sorry to hear something like that !

    • 10 months ago
  • guitar1100
  • slarabee
  • Raveway

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