Police stand outside the house in Closter, N.J., Feb. 7, 2015 where a couple was found dead in a possible murder-suicide. Marko Georgiev | The Record of Bergen County - Northjersey.com | AP

Another New York-area JPMorgan Chase employee is dead in an apparent murder-suicide, but experts cautioned against calling it a trend.

The bodies of Michael and Iran Pars Tabacchi—newlywed parents of a young boy—were discovered Friday in Closter, New Jersey. Iran, the wife, was stabbed once and strangled. The husband, Michael, died of a self-inflicted knife wound, according to Bergen County prosecutor John Molinelli. The couple's toddler was not harmed. Michael, 27, was a back-office employee in the bank's asset custody unit, according to his LinkedIn profile. He worked for JPMorgan since 2009. "I am very good and creative with data manipulation and reporting and can leverage my business knowledge to provide senior managers what is needed before asked to do so," his profile states.

Read MoreThe life and death of a master of the universe The Tabacchi suicide isn't the only one by a JPMorgan employee lately, as NJ.com noted recently. Another murder-suicide occurred in nearby Jefferson Township in July, when police said Julian Knott shot his wife Alita before killing himself. In February 2014, the New York Post noted three other mysterious deaths of JPMorgan bankers over just three weeks. But experts cautioned that the deaths weren't part of an obvious trend, even if parts of working on Wall Street make employees more prone to suicide. "A few similar tragedies doesn't necessarily make them statistically significant for JPMorgan. Ugly events get played up in the media partially because the public likes to hate on bankers," said Denise Shull, a psychological consultant to investment professionals at The ReThink Group in New York. "Still, that disdain for those who work on Wall Street can't help people suffering from other psychological stressors," Shull added. "It's highly unlikely to be the cause but being a societal target could surely contribute to the feelings of hopelessness that in turn push people over the mental edge."