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Goldman Sachs CEO calls tram shooting of worker a ‘silly misfortune’

Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs CEO calls tram shooting of worker a ‘silly misfortune’

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon said he’s “crushed” about the shooting Sunday on a New York City tram train that left one of his representatives dead.

Solomon said the person in question, Daniel Enriquez of Brooklyn, was a “cherished part” of the venture bank for quite some time and that he “exemplified our way of life of joint effort and greatness.”

“We are crushed by this silly misfortune and our most profound feelings are with Dan’s family at this troublesome time,” Solomon said, noticing that the assault was “without incitement.”

Enriquez, 48, was shot in the chest while the Q-line train was going on the Manhattan Bridge from the last stop in Brooklyn to Canal Street in Manhattan, as per a policing.

The shooting suspect, who escaped the train when it showed up at Canal, stays at large and no captures have been made.

As indicated by the New York Times, Enriquez lived in Park Slope, Brooklyn, and was gone to early lunch. His sister said he had kept away from the metro for the majority of the pandemic.

Enriquez joined the organization’s Global Investment Research division in 2013, as per Goldman Sachs, and upheld the company’s Macro Research group in New York.

The Sunday giving comes seven days after New York City Mayor Eric Adams asked the city’s business chiefs, including JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, to ride the tram to work. Adams is pushing to take individuals back to New York workplaces following quite a while of telecommuting.

“We will get him on a train,” Adams told the Financial Times in a meeting. “We will get everybody on the train. He comprehends the need of getting his kin back and driving from the front.”