London's Cocaine Survivors
The financial bust has forced some addicted traders and bankers
to come clean. Many of their colleagues remain mired in the
culture of booze and coke.
By Stephanie Baker and Thomas Penny
Bloomberg Markets, November 2009
Neill Junor remembers the exact moment he decided to quit
snorting cocaine. On a chilly December afternoon in 2005, the
former equities analyst took a stroll in London’s deer-filled
Richmond Park to select the tree from which he would hang
himself.
The decision to step back from the brink marked the end of
a six-year binge of drug and alcohol abuse that by then had cost
Junor his marriage and a career that paid him as much as
1 million pounds ($1.7 million) a year. He was out of work,
having already walked away from both his analyst job at BT Alex.
Brown and a subsequent position in a dot-com venture. “I burned
through everything,” Junor says. “I knew there was a choice --
and the choice was to hang from that tree or not.”
His story reflects the cocaine use that medical experts say
is rampant in the City, London’s financial district. It’s a
habit that often goes hand in hand with heavy drinking. Junor
says he and his mates wanted to maintain the thrill they felt at
work as they poured into the Square Mile’s pubs and clubs after
a day of getting high on finance.
“It’s the same rush from doing a deal and doing cocaine,”
Junor, 45, says. “The adulation from doing a deal spills into
going for a beer and then a party -- it’s an amorphous blob of
energy.” Everyone knows about the City’s drug problem,
recovering addicts say. Bosses turn a blind eye to drugs, as
long as you’re making money for your firm -- and until recently,
making big money was easy to do.
Cocaine Culture
Professionals in the detox business say bankers have
swamped them with calls since the financial crisis widened a
year ago. The Causeway Retreat, an addiction and mental health
hospital for professionals on a secluded island 40 miles (64
kilometers) east of London, has 15 people on the waiting list
for its 18-bed facility.
While few walk away from addiction as dramatically as
Junor, some bankers are questioning whether the diminished
rewards of the City are worth sacrificing their health, says
Philip Hopley, a psychiatrist who runs a clinic at the Lloyd’s
of London insurance building to be in the neighborhood where his
patients work.
“Doing cocaine or drinking heavily is part of the City
culture; you work hard and you play hard and you get rewarded
because your bonus is fantastic,” says Hopley, a consultant at
The Priory, a group that runs several mental health centers.
When the bonuses are cut and many of your friends lose their
livelihoods, things no longer look so good.
Brain Rush
“A number of people now tell me: ‘I finally realize what a
shit job I have got,’ ” Hopley says. “ ‘If it wasn’t for the
bonus, I wouldn’t be working these hours and I wouldn’t be
working with these people.’ ” The number of people in the
finance industry coming to see him has jumped by about 15
percent this year, he says.
Scientists say it’s no accident that trading and cocaine
sometimes go together. Both involve taking risks and have a
similar effect on the brain. Each activity raises dopamine
levels, the organ’s feel-good chemical, according to Trevor
Robbins, professor of cognitive neuroscience at the University
of Cambridge. Dopamine surges when we take risks, such as going
sky diving, betting on stock price movements or hiding in an
office rest room and snorting a line of coke.
Studies show that people who take risks have low levels of
dopamine receptors and try to shock the brain into a boost of
the chemical through novel situations. They’re also more likely
to become addicted, Robbins says.
City Casualty
Those who don’t seek help fast enough, like investment
manager Melvin Sabour, can become high-profile casualties.
Sabour, a managing director of AKN Investments Ltd., died
of a cocaine overdose in February. Sabour was depressed over
losses at his privately held firm, his girlfriend Kyara Dekker
told an April inquest into his death. She discovered Sabour, 44,
unconscious in the apartment they shared in Mayfair, the
neighborhood of townhouses and luxury stores that’s home to
money managers such as GLG Partners Inc. and Moore Capital
Management LLC. Sabour was pronounced dead by paramedics at the
scene. A postmortem examination found that Sabour had a lethal
level of metabolized cocaine in his blood and attributed his
demise to drugtriggered heart failure.
“Cocaine can and does have a bad effect on the heart and
it is quite a significant cause of death in men of younger age
in this area of London,” coroner Paul Knapman told the inquest
that determined the cause of Sabour’s death.
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