Grinkches in JPMORGAN doubled in their refusal to pay a pension to the vein of a former employee who has been fighting the financial giant for money for more than a decade, the post has learned.
Elaine Silverberg, 73, has been begging the bank led by Jamie Dimon to submit her husband’s 331 -dollar pension pot in a month in a discussion of lost documentation for 13 years, as the post exclusively reported last month.
But America’s biggest lender has repeatedly denied her claim – and has dug back on her heel again this holiday season, told a source of post on Friday.
An internal person at the global banking power plant, whose profits exceeded $ 12 billion in the third quarter of this year in the midst of an increase in investment banking tariffs, said there has been “no changes” in its SCROOGE -like stance that Silverberg is not eligible in a cent.
Sources at Wall Street Titan insisted that the bank had carried out “a complete and fair summary of its” many times “issue.
Silverberg’s husband, Mel, died suddenly from multiple organ failure at the age of 43 in 1988.
He had worked for a decade as a System analyst in Chase Manhattan Bank until 1979.
Chase Manhattan continued to join JPMORGAN in 2000.
JPMORGAN Chase admits her husband won a pension package given before leaving the bank.
But the bank also said he failed to create a form that chose him to take advantage of his pension after his death.
Ronald Reagan Administration approved the act of pension capital in 1984, so spouses like Elaine would automatically benefit if their loved ones died.
“Based on a change of law after he left the firm, he could have made a choice for a surviving benefit. The firm did not register that he would make that choice,” JPMORGAN said.
The full Mel cash pile currently is currently worth about $ 53,000, Silverberg said.
“I can’t find a lawyer who would like to sue JPMORGAN Chase about the amount of money to be generated for them,” she said. “I just have to hope for their good will in the spirit of the season.”
A JPMORGA spokesman refused to comment.
Silverberg, who was only 37 years old at the time of Mel’s death and only raised their three children, said the Global Banking Power Plant gave her a cold shoulder after the history of the post last month.
“I am very disappointed that no one responded in any way. No one returned to me, no one offered any explanation. It was deafening silence,” the retired government administrator explained.
“I always thought that if Jamie Dimon would learn about this he would like to do the right thing and honor the pension,” she added, referring to Queens’s 68-year-old locals, who has been JP Morgan’s CEO since 2006 and withdrew to $ 36 million last year.
The eighth grandmother described how Mel would volunteer to work at nights and weeks as she cared for their new family.
“He was a team player when they needed it. He was always there for them, she said.
The bank claims to write Mel on three separate cases after he had left, but Elaine says none of those correspondence ever arrived at the family home.
She said pension managers can only dig the documentation they say they prove they contacted Mel in 1990 – two years after he died.
“They have never given any evidence that they had tried to reach it three times,” she told the post.
Silverberg, who once registered the New Jersey Cory Booker Senator and former Brox Rep. Eliot Engel to fight in her corner asked Wall Street’s giant to return ahead of the next holiday season.
“Well the time of the year that companies are very generous for their employees and their staff and higher, and maybe they will decide that this is the time to do the right thing,” she said. “They are punishing my family based on the technique they created.”
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