Charlie Javice, founder of Frank, a financial aid startup, has been convicted of defrauding JPMorgan Chase out of $175 ...
Javice’s conviction is sending shockwaves through fintech and banking. The case exposes vulnerabilities in fintech ...
Prosecutors accused Javice of artificially inflating the customer list of her financial aid startup before selling it to ...
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 ...
Javice, 32, was found guilty on multiple counts after prosecutors successfully argued that she fabricated data to falsely ...
Federal prosecutors convinced a jury that Ms. Javice, along with one of her executives, had faked much of her customer list ...
At her $175M fraud trial this week, Charlie Javice's defense lawyers will tell a jury JPMorgan misunderstood two things: her ...
Javice was indicted in 2023 on securities fraud, wire fraud, bank fraud, and conspiracy charges nearly two years after ...
Charlie Javice, the founder of a college financial aid startup company, has been convicted of defrauding JPMorgan Chase out of $175 million.
Entrepreneur Charlie Javice was convicted on Friday of defrauding JPMorgan Chase into buying her college financial aid ...
Charlie Javice Convicted of Defrauding JPMorgan During $175 Million Sale of Financial Aid Startup NEW YORK (AP) — Charlie Javice, the charismatic founder of a startup company that claimed to be ...
The Frank student aid startup founder is guilty of defrauding JPMorgan. The max sentence is 30 years in prison.