Miguel Blesa, the former head of the ill-fated Spanish savings bank Caja Madrid, has been found dead at a hunting estate in the southern province of Cordoba with a gunshot wound to his chest.

A spokesperson for the Guardia Civil told Bloomberg that a worker from the estate called the police at about 8 a.m. An investigation has been opened into the death of the 69-year-old banker.

Financial world shaken by 4 bankers' apparent suicides in a week http://t.co/adkxyBElbs — RT (@RT_com) February 3, 2014

Blesa, who chaired Caja Madrid from 1996 to 2010, oversaw the bank’s merger with six other lenders into Bankia which in turn was rescued with €22 billion ($25.4 billion) in state aid.

In February the banker was sentenced to six years in jail over misuse of the company’s credit cards while at the bank's helm. Blesa had appealed the conviction.

He was also under judicial investigation in two other cases, including Caja Madrid's acquisition of City National Bank of Florida in 2008.

Miguel Blesa y las causas pendientes que deja su muerte https://t.co/cs94Dv9t3Cpic.twitter.com/EKUukQfWaQ — Liverdades (@Liverdades) July 19, 2017

According to documents seen by Bloomberg, Blesa and other officials, including former IMF chief Rodrigo Rato, ran up combined bills of more than €15 million on items including clothes, hotel stays, and cash withdrawals. The banker charged €437,000 to his credit card between 2003 and 2010 including a €2,350 jeweler’s bill.

Hallan MUERTO, por disparo en el pecho al ex presidente de #CajaMadrid Miguel Blesa, acusado de #corrupción,https://t.co/l5kZ4qqozjpic.twitter.com/r2h69ldojV — FORMATO 21 (@Formato21GRC) July 19, 2017

In 2013, leaked pictures of Blesa on exotic hunting trips caused an uproar in Spain as they showed him posing with a rifle next to the corpses of shot animals – a bear, a lion, an oryx, a hippopotamus and the heads of two water buffalo.