Founder Charlie Javice was responsible of leaving JPmorgan Chase

Charlie Javice, who is charged in 2021 because of the purchase of her now briefed College Financial Aid Startups Frank Frank, Frank, will arrive at the United States Court in Manhattan in New York City on June 6, 2023.

Mike Frisch | Reuters

Charlie Javice, founder of a startup from bought by JPmorgan Chase In 2021, on Friday, the Federal Supreme Court was sentenced to defraud the bank's customer list.

After weeks of statements in New York, the jury's decision comes about who was responsible for the flame of an initiating startup. Frank, who was founded by Javice in 2016, wanted to help users apply for a financial college aid.

JPMorgan has accused the 32 -year -old Javice to cheat on the bank of paying $ 175 million for a company that had more than 4 million customers than was actually less than 300,000.

Javice sued the largest US bank according to assets at the end of 2022, after trying to send marketing -e emails to some of the thousands of “customers” that Frank had. In his complaint, JPMorgan published e -mails in which Javice hired a data scientist to generate a fake list of customers.

Then, in April 2023, the Ministry of Justice Javice accused Javice for four crimes, including wire and bank fraud, had maximum sentences with several decades. Javice was arrested at Newark Airport on April 3 this year and was against the deposit.

Javice was not guilty and said she was innocent throughout the process; Her lawyers accused JPmorgan of closing Frank -Acquisition because she feared that others would be more freely.

The conviction will take place in August, reported CNBC Leslie Picker.

A spokesman for the JPmorgan based in New York rejected a comment on Friday, while the office of a lawyer who represented Javice did not immediately call a call to look for a comment.

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