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JPMorgan foots insane $115M legal bill for cunning woman who scammed the bank with phony startup

by London Mail
October 7, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 5 mins read

JPMorgan Chase must foot a mammoth $115 million legal bill for a woman convicted of defrauding the bank by making inflated promises about her startup.

The defense’s bill is about two-thirds of the $175 million JPMorgan shelled out in September 2021 for Charlie Javice’s company Frank.

Javice secured the invested by fraudulently claiming that the student loan planning company Javice said had 4.25 million customers when it actually had fewer than 300,000.

The staggering cost of her legal fees was revealed last week when Javice, 28, was sentenced to seven years in prison for the fraud.

At trial, a combined 35 lawyers appeared in court for Javice and her co-defendant Oliver Amar, who served as her chief growth officer at Frank and was also convicted.

JPMorgan found itself in the unenviable position of having to pay to defend Javice and Amar because the two were already employed as executives at the bank when their lies were exposed.

JPMorgan fired the pair and tried to wiggle out this by suing them, but a Delaware judge ruled in 2023 that the terms of the Frank merger agreement obligated the bank to cover their legal costs.

In January 2023, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said the acquisition of Frank was ‘a huge mistake’. 

Kevin O’Brien, a former federal prosecutor who now defends white collar defendants in New York, told Bloomberg that $115 million for a legal defense is a ‘huge, huge number’.

Charlie Javice, who was sentenced to seven years in prison last week, had her entire legal defense bankrolled by JPMorgan to the tune of $115 million. This sum will only grow if the bank is required to defend her during the appeals process

Charlie Javice, who was sentenced to seven years in prison last week, had her entire legal defense bankrolled by JPMorgan to the tune of $115 million. This sum will only grow if the bank is required to defend her during the appeals process

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan, called it a 'huge mistake' to buy Frank, Javice's financial planning website for students. Javice and her co-defendant Oliver Amar created fake user data to inflate the number of customers they had to 4.25 million, when it was actually fewer than 300,000

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan, called it a ‘huge mistake’ to buy Frank, Javice’s financial planning website for students. Javice and her co-defendant Oliver Amar created fake user data to inflate the number of customers they had to 4.25 million, when it was actually fewer than 300,000

Javice and Amar’s costs dwarfed those of Elizabeth Holmes, the fraudster behind phony blood-testing company Theranos, who paid at least $30 million to defend herself according to a court filing before her November 2022 sentencing. 

It is unclear why their costs soared so high, but JPMorgan has argued that it was being overbilled primarily by Alex Spiro, the $2,025-an-hour Quinn Emanuel partner known for representing Elon Musk. 

JPMorgan may be on the hook for even more legal costs, since Javice and Amar were sued by the bank itself and the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Those civil suits will remain on hold until the criminal case comes to an end, which will only happen once Javice exhausts her appeals of her conviction and sentence.

In a Monday filing with the court, Javice’s lawyers said they expect JPMorgan to cover the costs associated with her appeal as well.

US District Judge Alvin Hellerstein ordered Javice to repay JPMorgan $287.5 million in restitution, but even if the order isn’t chipped away at by the defense, the bank will almost certainly never see all of that money.

Javice is only required to pay 10 percent of her income toward the order after she leaves prison, according to a court filing. The order also expires in 20 years.

In March, a New York jury convicted Javice and Amar for cooking up an elaborate scheme to hoodwink JPMorgan to acquire their site, which offered a free tool to help college students fill out financial aid applications.

Javice (pictured leaving court in March 2025 after she was convicted) is appealing her conviction and sentence with the help of high-powered appellate attorney, Alexandra Shapiro, who also represents FTX founder and CEO Sam Bankman-Fried and Sean 'Diddy' Combs

Javice (pictured leaving court in March 2025 after she was convicted) is appealing her conviction and sentence with the help of high-powered appellate attorney, Alexandra Shapiro, who also represents FTX founder and CEO Sam Bankman-Fried and Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs

Olivier Amar, who was convicted on all the same charges as Javice, is scheduled to be sentenced on October 20

Olivier Amar, who was convicted on all the same charges as Javice, is scheduled to be sentenced on October 20

A data scientist testified that Javice paid him $18,000 to create ‘synthetic’ user data comprised of false phone and social security numbers to show JPMorgan.

One of the main arguments the defense mounted was that JPMorgan did not do its due diligence in evaluating the merits of the deal.

Judge Hellerstein did not buy this, once stating that he was focused on Javice’s conduct, ‘not JPMorgan’s stupidity’.

Javice will remain a free woman during the appeals process after convincing the judge that her previous charitable works and fertility struggles warranted bail.

Alexandra Shapiro, one of the nation’s most prominent appellate attorneys, will help Javice try to reverse her conviction and sentence.

Shapiro also represents FTX founder and CEO Sam Bankman-Fried and Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs. 

In several letters to the judge, Shapiro said Javice plans on spending her time before prison trying to start a family with her partner.

‘If there is a chance for it to succeed. I want to give it to her,’ the judge said.

Amar, who was convicted on all the same charges, is scheduled to be sentenced on October 20.

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