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Rick Nederstigt | AFP | Getty Images A Dutch banker killed his wife and younger daughter before committing suicide, police said on Monday. Jan Peter Schmittmann, 57, who ran domestic
operations at ABN AMRO when it was one of the largest banks in the world, was found dead at his home in the wealthy Amsterdam commuter town of Laren early on Saturday. Police said forensic
work carried out over the weekend had given them a clear picture of the deaths of Schmittmann, his 57-year-old wife and 22-year-old younger daughter. Read More "The mother and daughter
were killed by the father, after this the father killed himself,'' police said in a statement. Police said Schmittmann had left a suicide note but they declined to give more
details about what was in the note or the way the three had died. Schmittmann had suffered from serious depression, his family said in a statement. "That that would finally lead to
these events is still impossible for us to understand,'' they said. Read More Schmittmann came to public attention when he left the bank after its nationalization in 2008.
Contractually due a 16 million euro ($21.99 million) pay-off, he received half the sum after then finance minister Wouter Bos described it as exorbitant. "The bank is shocked by the
event,'' an ABN AMRO spokesman said. Schmittmann is the second former ABN AMRO executive to die in unusual circumstances in the past five years. In 2009, former chief financial
officer Huibert Boumeester was found dead in woodland near London in an apparent suicide a year after he had left the bank. ABN AMRO, a household name and a symbol of Dutch financial
strength, was bought and split up by a consortium of Royal Bank of Scotland, Fortis and Santander at the height of an economic boom in 2007 in a $100 billion deal. But during the financial
crisis, the bank came back into Dutch hands when big debts dragged Belgium's Fortis into difficulties and the Dutch state nationalized its domestic operations, resurrecting the ABN AMRO
name. Read More Schmittmann pursued a career in private equity and consulting following his departure from the bank. Since 2010 he had been owner and director of 5 Park Lane, a company that
advised private equity investors. Among its investments was SynerScope, which according to its website develops data visualization tools to help investigators detect fraud in banking,
insurance and forensic accounting. _—Reuters_