The 33-year-old founder of the startup student financial aid company Frank has been sentenced to more than seven years in prison. Prosecutors said Charlie Javice fooled JPMorgan Chase into buying her ...
NEW YORK - Charlie Javice, the entrepreneur convicted of defrauding JPMorgan Chase into buying her college financial aid startup Frank for $175 million, was sentenced on Monday, Sept. 29 to just over ...
The founder sold her financial aid startup to JPMorgan Chase in 2021. Startup founder Charlie Javice was sentenced Monday to seven years in prison for a crime the judge called "biblical," defrauding ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Javice, a 2013 Penn grad, was found guilty of lying to get ...
Javice misled JPMorgan about her number of clients before the bank bought her startup for $175 million Adam Gray/Bloomberg via Getty Entrepreneur Charlie Javice was sentenced to 85 months in prison ...
Charlie Javice, the fintech entrepreneur convicted of defrauding JPMorgan Chase, got bad news from her New York judge — she must show up for a sentencing scheduled for Monday despite her request for ...
JPMorgan Chase fraudster Charlie Javice wants to delay her September 29 sentencing, saying she cannot fly. The delay request is not sitting well with federal prosecutors and Javice's Manhattan judge.
Charlie Javice is due to be sentenced in New York on Monday for defrauding JPMorgan Chase of $175M. On Thursday night, the judge denied Javice's last-minute request for a postponement. Javice's ...