Another Bank of America employee dies suddenly

Bank of America is mourning the loss of a young employee who died suddenly Thursday, the second one to do so this month.

25 years young 

25-year-old Adnan Deumic was playing soccer with some of his colleagues from Bank of America’s London office when he suddenly collapsed. CPR was administered but failed to save the young trader. While a cause of death has not yet been revealed, The New York Post has reported that Deumic is believed to have suffered a sudden cardiac arrest.

“The death of our teammate is a tragedy, and we are shocked by the sudden loss of a popular, young colleague,” a Bank of America spokesman said. “We are committed to providing our full support to Adnan’s family, his friends and to our many employees grieving his loss.”

Former Green Beret

The tragedy came exactly two weeks after another Bank of America employee, 35-year-old Leo Lukenas III, also died suddenly. The father of two and former Green Beret reportedly died from acute coronary artery thrombus, a blood clot in the heart that causes heart attacks. 

While difficult working conditions are being blamed for the two deaths, social media netizens are suggesting the COVID-19 vaccines may have played a part.

What the Science Says

In 2022, researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) discovered a direct correlation between the COVID-19 shots and a 25% rise in cardiac events among young people. The State of Florida, in a statement warning against COVID-19 vaccination for males aged 18–39, attached its own study conducted by the Florida Department of Health. The study found an 84% increase in cardiac-related deaths among males in the 18–39 age group within 28 days of receiving an mRNA shot.

Studies before COVID-19 estimated the annual number of sudden cardiac deaths among people under 35 to be 1.3 cases per 100,000.

Former CDC director: ‘We have to be honest’

Former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Dr. Robert Redfield last week called for a public discussion about significant side effects from the COVID-19 shots.

“Nobody wanted to talk about the potential there was a problem with the vaccines because they were afraid that would cause people to not want to get vaccinated,” Dr. Redfield told Chris Cuomo on News Nation.

“We have to be honest, some people got significant side effects from the vaccine. I have a number of people that are quite ill and they never had COVID, but they are ill from the vaccine. And we just have to acknowledge that,” he added.