Accountancy and consulting firm EY emailed employees offering ongoing support after the death of a young staff member at its Sydney headquarters in the early hours of Saturday morning while her unaware husband was on his way to Australia.
The death of the 33-year-old, which has rocked the world of corporate accounting, happened after the woman returned to the office at 7.30pm – about two hours after joining colleagues for drinks at Ivy nightclub on Friday night.
Then, about five hours later, just after midnight, a construction worker and his colleague working on a site next to the George Street headquarters heard a crash as the woman fell on to the awning above the front entrance of the building.
Police have determined the woman used her security swipe card to access a secure patio on the building’s upper floors.
A woman was found dead out the front of Ernst & Young’s Sydney headquarters (pictured) early on Saturday morning after leaving a work event
A detective and uniformed police officer were seen speaking to a woman in the reception of the building on Tuesday morning
The worker said security guards inside the premises raised the alarm, with police and paramedics rushing to the area and closing off the scene.
The employee was shocked to learn details of the incident from the first responders at the scene.
‘There was a big blue tarpaulin over her… it’s awful and so tragic.
‘We were pretty shocked. We had no idea. It’s terrible, the poor woman.’
It is understood the woman was foreign national who has been spent approximately six months working for EY.
Her husband was on a flight from Singapore to Australia when the woman fell to her death.
He learned of her fate when he got off the plane at Sydney airport, The Australian reported.
Police have determined the woman used her security swipe card to access a secure patio on the building’s upper floors (a balcony at the Ernst & Young building is pictured)
It is understood the woman was foreign national who has been spent approximately six months working for EY. Pictured: Inside the office of Ernst & Young
The tragedy has shocked the Sydney’s accounting industry, which is now in the middle of peak auditing season where some of county’s brightest number-crunchers scramble to meet deadlines for high-powered clients.
Daily Mail Australia is not suggesting the work culture at EY contributed to the tragic circumstances, and the woman’s position at the firm and personal circumstances are unknown.
Staff at EY (the trade name of the firm Ernst & Young) were emailed by a member of management on Monday to tell them that ‘it is with great sadness I am sharing the news that one of our team members died at the EY building in Sydney over the weekend’.
The woman returned to Ernst and Young’s central Sydney office (pictured) at about 7.30pm on Friday. She was found dead hours later
‘While the police investigation is ongoing we have been informed that there were no suspicious circumstances,’ the email added.
‘We have been in touch with the family of the person to offer our condolences and ongoing support.’
The email said the company would launch a ‘comprehensive and wide-ranging internal review ‘ of its health and safety, security and social policies in the wake of the tragedy.
A group of EY workers told Daily Mail Australia that employees had been offered counselling.
A uniformed NSW Police officer and a detective were on site at the scene on Tuesday morning meeting with senior bosses.
‘This the worst case scenario so management is doing everything they can,’ one staff member said.
‘We’ve never known anything like this. It’s appalling … it’s so gruesome.’
The employees, who didn’t know the woman, said the company is made up of multiple teams, each consisting of around 30 to 40 people.
‘The ‘work hard, play hard’ (culture) depends on your team,’ they said. ‘Some are like that, others are not.’
The woman arrived at the bar at around 5.30pm on Friday for an event organised by the accounting giant’s social club.
She spent the next two hours there and left just before 7.30pm for the short walk back to her office.
Police have been scouring CCTV footage from nearby cameras (pictured) to piece together the woman’s final moments
Police are not treating the death as ‘suspicious’ and investigations are still under way to determine what happened after she had her last drink.
It has been alleged she was escorted from the venue by staff due to excessive consumption of alcohol, The Australian reported.
But CCTV footage seen by investigators once she returned to 200 George Street in Circular Quay, overlooking Sydney Harbour, did not suggest she was noticeably intoxicated.
It also remains unclear if the employee came back to the skyscraper to continue working into the evening or whether she was there for another reason.
Temporary repairs have been made to an awning damaged during the incident, but blood is yet to be cleaned from the scene
Floral tributes were noticeably absent from the scene on Tuesday morning, as myriad workers streamed in and out of the building, walking underneath the blood-soaked awning.
A detective and uniformed cop were seen entering the building and waiting in the lobby until a woman arrived to greet them then took the pair upstairs.
In recent years EY had faced criticism along with the other big accounting firms – KPMG, Deloitte and PWC – for its extreme working hours and competitive corporate culture.
Last year an email from bosses within EY’s Hong Kong financial services team set out their gruelling ‘peak season working protocol and expectations’. It’s not suggested the same edict applies in Australia.
‘Staff must start work by 9.30am and finish no earlier than 11.30pm,’ the email said.
‘I think midnight is common in peak seasons – it counts on the discipline and responsibility of yourself.
‘For weekends, I expect at least one day we are spending the whole day (from 10.00am-7.30pm) in office.’
The woman who was found dead at Ernst and Young’s central Sydney office had spent two hours earlier in the evening at glitzy Sydney watering hole the Ivy nightclub (pictured)
The firm’s management are now set to conduct a ‘comprehensive and wide-ranging internal review encompassing health and safety, security, social events as they relate to our staff’.
EY CEO and Regional Managing Partner David Larocca said the company’s employees were receiving counselling over the tragedy.
‘Our Chief Mental Health Officer will be part of an ongoing review and has been instrumental over the weekend in providing ongoing advice and guidance,’ he said.
‘Counselling has been offered to all staff and team members.’
EY is also assisting police with their ongoing investigation as a report is being prepared for the Coroner.
‘Our hearts go out the family and we have been in contact to offer our support and condolences,’ Mr Larocca said.
In 2019, a parliamentary enquiry heard how young staffers ‘carried the can’ as workers ‘burned the midnight oil’ at senior consulting firms.
Auditors often work 12 hour days, and even longer when it’s peak season.
For confidential 24-hour support in Australia call Lifeline on 13 11 14.
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