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The judge sided in part with the defense, ordering the government to force JP Morgan to release more evidence. AdvertisementAdvertisementA federal judge on Thursday ruled that prosecutors must compel JP Morgan to find more evidence that could help Charlie Javice, the founder of the financial aid startup Frank, in her defense in her criminal fraud trial. On Thursday, inside U.S. Federal Court in Manhattan, lawyers for Javice and a co-defendant argued for more documents from JP Morgan Chase. AdvertisementAdvertisementMeanwhile, a Delaware judge ruled that JP Morgan Chase is violating a commitment that it made upon acquiring Frank to pay a significant portion of Javice's legal bills. Her lawyers say that JP Morgan Chase owes them $835,000 of the around $3.8 million they have so far charged.
Persons: Charlie Javice, Frank founder's, JP Morgan, , JP Morgan Chase, Frank, Javice, Alex Spiro, Spiro, Dina McLeod, Alvin K, Hellerstein, Morgan Chase, Judge Hellerstein, Olivier Amar, Sean Buckley Organizations: Service, U.S, Federal, Javice Locations: Manhattan, Delaware
JPMorgan and prosecutors claim Charlie Javice fraudulently inflated the value of her startup. But JPMorgan was ordered to pay her legal fees – totaling almost $3.8 million, new filings show. AdvertisementAdvertisementLawyers for indicted startup founder Charlie Javice say JPMorgan Chase is defying a court order to pay almost a fifth of the nearly $3.8 million in legal bills they've racked up. But a Delaware judge said JPMorgan still had to honor its commitment to advance Javice's legal fees under agreements it made when it acquired Frank. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe bank's unpaid tab totals more than $835,000, Javice's lawyers claimed, amounting to about 22% of the total amount they've sought.
Persons: Charlie Javice, , JPMorgan Chase, they've, Olivier Amar, Frank, Abrams, Bayliss, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart, Sullivan, Michael Barlow, Mintz Levin, wasn't Organizations: JPMorgan, Service, Javice, Securities and Exchange Commission Locations: Delaware
Javice is accused of grossly exaggerating the numbers of customers she had before her sale to JP Morgan. After hat after the initial deception to JP Morgan Chase, Javice and Amar pivoted to another, Fergenson said. Javice and Amar presented it all in a spreadsheet to JP Morgan Chase, representing all of the names to be Frank users, Fergenson said. Javice's attorney, Alex Spiro, who has alleged that JP Morgan Chase is retaliating against his client for her exposure of their violating of privacy laws, objected. "The government is just regurgitating to the court JP Morgan Chase's civil lawsuit," he said.
Persons: Frank, Charlie Javice, Javice, JP Morgan, Olivier Amar, JP Morgan Chase, Mr, Amar, Micah F, Fergenson, Morgan Chase, Alvin K, Hellerstein, nodded, , Alex Spiro, Morgan, Judge Hellerstein Organizations: University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business, Forbes, Fast Company, of, Securities and Exchange Commission Locations: Manhattan, Pennsylvania, Southern, of New York
Companies JPMorgan Chase & Co FollowNEW YORK, July 12 (Reuters) - U.S. prosecutors on Wednesday unveiled an indictment charging Olivier Amar, who helped run college financial aid startup Frank, with defrauding JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) into buying their company for $175 million. Amar, who was Frank's chief growth officer, was charged with wire fraud, bank fraud, securities fraud and conspiracy, becoming the second company official indicted in the case. Lawyers for Amar, whose whereabouts were not immediately known, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's office in Manhattan also did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The bank shut down Frank in January, and Chief Executive Jamie Dimon branded the acquisition a "huge mistake."
Persons: Olivier Amar, Amar, Frank, Charlie Javice, Javice, Jamie Dimon, counterclaims, Luc Cohen, Bill Berkrot Organizations: JPMorgan Chase, U.S, JPMorgan, Thomson Locations: Manhattan, U.S, Amar, Delaware, New York
Companies JPMorgan Chase & Co FollowNEW YORK, May 18 (Reuters) - The young entrepreneur Charlie Javice has been indicted on charges of defrauding JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N), the largest U.S. bank, into buying her now-shuttered college financial aid startup Frank. A four-count grand jury indictment made public on Thursday in Manhattan federal court charges Javice with securities fraud, wire fraud, bank fraud and conspiracy. In connection with that, prosecutors were granted more time to have Javice indicted by a grand jury. JPMorgan separately sued Javice and former Frank chief growth officer Olivier Amar in December in Delaware federal court for fraud, saying they inflated Frank's customer base to induce the bank's purchase. Javice countersued JPMorgan, saying it owes millions of dollars after firing her "without valid cause" in November.
JPMorgan had sued Javice and Olivier Amar, who was Frank's chief growth officer, in Delaware federal court in December. The OCC audit was scheduled before JPMorgan's lawsuit, the report said. Javice filed counterclaims in February, accusing JPMorgan of having "compromised her reputation" and wrongfully withheld $28 million of retention payments and equity. JPMorgan and the OCC did not immediately respond to Reuters request for comment. Reporting by Baranjot Kaur in Bengaluru; Editing by Jamie FreedOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Drop any Wall Street (or non-Wall Street) questions you have for me here. A quick refresher: JPMorgan accused Javice of juicing Frank's customer numbers in a lawsuit filed at the end of last year. Prosecutors charged Javice with wire fraud affecting a financial institution, securities fraud, bank fraud, and conspiracy. I've joked about it before, but Taylor Swift really should teach a class on this stuff for Wall Street. It's not the president or Wall Street or Congress that's to blame.
Companies JPMorgan Chase & Co FollowNEW YORK, April 4 (Reuters) - The U.S. government on Tuesday filed criminal charges accusing Charlie Javice, the founder of the now-shuttered college financial planning company Frank, of defrauding JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) into buying the startup for $175 million in 2021. Prosecutors said that when JPMorgan asked for a list of names, Javice paid an unnamed data science professor $18,000 to concoct a sham list of names. JPMorgan shut down Frank in January, and Chief Executive Jamie Dimon branded the acquisition a "huge mistake" in a Jan. 13 conference call with analysts. In December, JPMorgan sued Javice and Olivier Amar, who was Frank's chief growth officer, in Delaware federal court. Javice filed counterclaims in February, accusing JPMorgan of having "compromised her reputation" and wrongfully withheld $28 million of retention payments and equity.
Charlie Javice, who sold her student-aid startup Frank to JPMorgan Chase, was charged with fraud. The bank claimed Javice faked millions of customers to convince it to buy Frank for $175 million. Federal prosecutors in Manhattan charged Javice with wire fraud affecting a financial institution, securities fraud, bank fraud and conspiracy on Tuesday. JPMorgan acquired Frank in 2021 for $175 million, but began to question the authenticity of the startup's purported 4 million users after an email marketing campaign ended in "disaster," according to the bank's lawsuit and a filing by prosecutors. Out of 400,000 emails sent to Frank users, more than 70% bounced back and only 103 were opened, the bank claimed.
Her financial aid startup, Frank, was featured in the New York Times, CNBC and Wall Street Journal. After leaving the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton business school, Javice traded on her reputation, bolstered by glowing profiles, as a successful entrepreneur. In a 2018 interview with Insider, Javice claimed Frank secured an average of $28,000 for its users, and was helping students get "thousands off their tuition." "Charlie's first company fizzled after 18 months, so after losing all her investors' money, she convinced every one of them to fund her next company, Frank." At Frank, Javice admitted she sometimes painted a more positive picture of the company's health than was supported by the facts.
Mike Mayo Bloomberg TVIn response, Dimon said that JPMorgan has been "very disciplined" in its acquisition strategy, but added that the Frank acquisition was, "in one way or another, a huge mistake." Mayo has previously been critical of JPMorgan's spending plans, which also became a flashpoint for some JPMorgan investors in the run up to the bank's investor day last May. In 2020, Insider detailed how JPMorgan spun up a "rapid proof-of-concept" model to speed along startup investments within its corporate and investment banking division. That team was headed by Michael Elanjian, who now leads digital investment banking at JPMorgan, according to his LinkedIn. Or are you a shareholder with concerns about the bank's spending?
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Companies JPMorgan Chase & Co FollowJan 12 (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) on Thursday shut down the website of Frank, a college financial planning platform it acquired in 2021, after suing the startup's founder Charlie Javice and Chief Growth Officer Olivier Amar for creating nearly 4 million fake customer accounts. The largest U.S. bank by assets had paid $175 million for Frank in a bid to deepen its ties with students. The bank said it was led to believe more than 4.25 million students had created accounts on Frank. However, when JPMorgan sent marketing test emails to a list of Frank's customers that the company had provided, only 28% of them were delivered, the bank alleged. JPMorgan said it generally sees a delivery rate of 99% with similar campaigns.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. is suing the leaders of Frank, a financial-aid business it bought for $175 million in 2021, alleging they duped the bank by making up millions of fake student accounts to show it had a growing business. The bank filed a lawsuit late last month in a Delaware federal court against Frank executives Charlie Javice and Olivier Amar , alleging widespread fraud at a company that is marketed as helping families navigate the complex college financial-aid process. Frank offered a tool to simplify federal financial-aid forms, as well as listings of scholarships and low-cost college courses.
JPMorgan alleged that college financial-planning website Frank lied about its growth and users. JPMorgan's suit accused Frank's founder Charlie Javice and its former chief growth officer Olivier Amar of being in on a scheme to juice its user numbers. The pair used that list to make the inflated user numbers seem credible. The bank claimed that the startup provided the false user numbers while it was conducting due diligence when looking into acquiring the company. As of Thursday morning, JPMorgan had closed down Frank's website, a representative for the bank confirmed to Insider.
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