JPM
Chase Fooled by Frank Founder Free
on $2M Bond Now Indicted For Fraud
in SDNY
by
Matthew Russell Lee, Patreon Book
Substack
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
May 18 – JPMorgan
Chase bought a
start-up
called Frank,
which claimed
to have 4
million
students
signed up to
file their
FAFSA forms,
for $175
million. Then
Chase learned
Frank had only
300,000
customers.
On
April 4, 2023,
Frank founder
Ms. Charlie
Javice was
brought before
U.S. District
Court for the
Southern
District of
New York
Magistrate
Judge Barbara
C. Moses,
represented by
Quinn
Emanuel.
The
complaint
quotes Javice
messages with
the engineers
she hired to
create the
false data,
and to enter
in data she
bought on the
open market.
To one of
them, she is
quoted, "We
don't want to
end up in
orange
jumpsuits."
In
the tri-state,
it is
Westchester
County
Department of
Corrections in
Valhalla that
dresses its
inmates in
orange. MDC
Brooklyn uses
beige; Essex
County
Corrections
Facility in
New Jersey
uses yellow.
In any event,
white collar
defendant
Javice, who
took on an
appropriately
or
strategically
contrite look
on Worth
Street still
barricaded for
the nearby
state court
arraignment of
former
President
Donald Trump,
was freed on
$2 million
bond, travel
restricted to
SDNY and EDNY
and the
Southern
District of
Florida, where
she lives.
On May
18,
Javice was
indicted on
bank, wire and
securities
fraud counts,
and the case
assigned to District
Judge Alvin K.
Hellerstein.
Inner City
Press will
stay on this
case - and
other JPMC
cases,
including the
Jeffrey
Epstein-related
case against
Chase in which
CEO Dimon must
give
discovery.
This case is
US v. Javice,
23-cr-251
(Hellerstein)
***
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