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Charlie Javice, the founder of student-finance startup Frank, was convicted on Friday of defrauding JPMorgan Chase & Co. in connection with the bank’s $175 million acquisition of her company.
Charlie Javice, who faces a prison sentence of 14 to 17.5 years, unsuccessfully sought to portray JPMorgan Chase as careless.
Charlie Javice and Olivier Amar, founders of startup Frank, have been convicted for defrauding JPMorgan Chase in a $175 million scam.
Frank founder Charlie Javice kicked off her defense case with some firepower at her JPMorgan Chase fraud trial Thursday — calling private equity billionaire Marc Rowan to the witness stand. The Apollo ...
Javice hustled all her life, all the way to a deal to sell her startup Frank to the world’s biggest bank. Then it all fell apart.
Charlie Javice, an Ivy League grad who launched her company Frank in 2017 with the claim she ... was convicted Friday of defrauding JPMorgan Chase out of $175 million by lying about the size ...
Access to Frank's client list is one of the things JPMorgan Chase was after when it entered into talks to buy the company in 2021. At the time, Javice was claiming Frank had over 4.25 million clients.
One week before she sold her startup to JPMorgan Chase for $175 million, Charlie Javice asked an employee to help create a list of four million users—more than 10 times as many accounts as the ...
Frank, established in 2017 as TAPD Inc., was ... claiming it had over 4.25 million clients. When JPMorgan Chase sought to verify the client list, Javice first approached her company's head of ...