"A growing number of people in the US,
many of them working class and living
in small towns or rural areas, feel that
debt, deteriorating economic
conditions or outright poverty have
deprived them of a future worth living.
Scarpelli and Colant were erstwhile
successful professionals living in the
middle of New York City."
Manhattan couple commit
suicide due to “financial spiral”
By Isaac Finn
31 July 2017
31 July 2017
On the morning of Friday, July 28, a middle-aged
couple jumped to their death from a building in mid-town Manhattan. In their
suicide notes the couple explained they “cannot live with” their “financial
reality.”
According to media reports, Glenn Scarpelli, 53,
and his wife, Patricia Colant, 50, were seen the night before their deaths
removing their belongings from their home and putting them on the curb—a sign
they may have been recently evicted. The following morning they leaped from the
ninth floor of a Madison Avenue building, where Scarpelli worked as a
chiropractor and Colant as his receptionist.
The couple had placed their respective suicide
notes and IDs inside plastic bags in their pockets.
Scarpelli’s note, which was headed, “We had a
wonderful life,” explained, “Patricia and I had everything in life,” before
referring to the couple’s “financial spiral.”
Colant’s letter also provided contact
information for family and friends, and instructions on how to notify their two
children about their deaths.
Friends and relatives of Scarpelli and Colant
have expressed shock to the media over the couple’s death, and it has been
widely reported that the family was well known and liked at restaurants and
bars in New York’s financial district—where they lived.
Scarpelli was also known
for generosity with his time. Following the events of September 11, 2001, he
volunteered countless hours as a chiropractor at ground zero. Adam Lamb, a
fellow volunteer, told the New York Post, “We helped adjust for
stressed and freaked out firefighters, policemen anyone who needed help.”
Amy Lambert, who rented a room at Scarpelli’s
Madison Wellness Center, described him as someone who “just wanted to help
people.” She also noted that he “never turned anyone away if they couldn’t
afford his services.”
Scarpelli’s father, Joseph C. Scarpelli, was
mayor of Brick Township, New Jersey, until he was named in a federal government
corruption probe. The elder Scarpelli was eventually sentenced to 18 months in
jail.
New York Police Department Chief of Detectives
Robert Boyce told the media that the source of the couple’s money problems was
unclear. However, part of the difficulties seem to stem from Scarpelli’s
student loans. In 2013 a federal judge ordered him to pay almost $62,000 as
part of a lawsuit by the government over his failure to repay loans he took out
in 2000 as a student at Logan College of Chiropractic (now Logan University) in
Chesterfield, Missouri in suburban St. Louis.
Scarpelli and Colant also sent both their
children to the prestigious Loyola High School, which costs roughly $38,000 a
year. Their daughter Isabella, 20, is currently a student at St. Edwards
University in Austin, Texas, and their son, Joseph, 19, attends the University
of Miami.
The family also had a lien against them from
September showing they owed $23,304 in federal back taxes, and a separate lien
in April 2015 revealed they were $232,295 in arrears.
Numerous friends of the couple have told the
media they were entirely unaware of the financial problems, and some have
speculated that other factors may have contributed to Scarpelli and Colant’s
decision to end their lives. Further details may well emerge over the course of
the next few days.
According to a report
published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine in
2015, a close relation exists between the rise in suicide rates among 40 to
64-year-olds and economic instability or decline. The report notes that
“external economic factors” were tied to 37.5 percent of all suicides in 2010
compared to 32.9 percent in 2005. From 2000 to 2014, the Journal pointed
out, there was an increase in suicide rates by 43 percent for men and 63
percent for women between the ages of 45 to 64.
A growing number of people in the US, many of
them working class and living in small towns or rural areas, feel that debt,
deteriorating economic conditions or outright poverty have deprived them of a
future worth living. Scarpelli and Colant were erstwhile successful
professionals living in the middle of New York City.
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