SERIALously - 31: 28 Year Old Con Woman Uses Her Beauty & Charm to Defraud $175 MILLION Dollars | Anna Delvey 2.0
Episode Date: July 10, 2023The case of financial fraudster and fake German heiress Anna Delvey took the world by storm and even inspired a hit Netflix series. People were captivated by her scheme to secure a 22 million dollar l...oan to start an art foundation by pretending to have a German trust fund worth over 40 million dollars. If you’ve never heard of that case, the craziest part was that she jumped through so many hoops, flying by the seat of her pants, AND it was all for nothing because she never even got the money for the foundation. Before the loan was approved, Anna’s lies, forgery, and financial misgivings caught up to her, and she was arrested for fraud and exposed to the entire world. Now there’s a new scammer in town, and some people say she blows Anna out of the water. Your True Crime BFF, Annie Elise All Social Media Links: https://www.flowcode.com/page/annieelise_ About Me: https://annieelise.com/ For Business Inquiries: 10toLife@WMEAgency.com Charlie Interview Credit: www.BillCarmody.com https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2vM0bj8mPCw Today's Sponsors: Better Help: Give online therapy a try at https://www.betterhelp.com/ae and get on your way to being your best self. PDS Debt: Get your free debt analysis by going to: https://www.PDSDebt.com/Save
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, true crime besties. Welcome back to an all new episode of Serialistly.
Hey everybody, welcome back to an all new episode of Serialistly with me, Annie, your true crime bestie. Here to break down yet another wild, crazy-ass true crime case.
And I just have to say, I knew I was going to be recording this episode today. And if you're watching the YouTube version of this, this will make much more sense.
But like, I don't know what's going on with my getup today.
So I apologize in advance.
Let me break it down for you podcast listeners.
But I'm wearing like these black bike shorts that look like have a lightning bolt on the
side of them.
I'm wearing a Guns N' Roses graphic tee.
And then let me just, I'm going to, we need to do a close-up of the shoes Roses graphic tee and then let me just I'm gonna we need to do a
close-up of the shoes here guys like let me just show you. I like got these new platform Crocs
which I am a Crocs virgin. I have never owned a pair of Crocs in my life. Personal choice but like
I tried on my friend Callie's over the weekend and they were so extremely comfy. These ones are
like not traditional Crocs. They look like a platform with like a 90s platform with like a big slide strap across the top. So I bought them and then
like I never thought I would wear Crocs. I never thought I would wear the little charms on it,
which fun fact they're called gibbets, but I kind of went wild. And so like I'm gonna,
you can see this on the video version, but let's, let's get a closeup. Let's zoom in on this bad boy. I basically got the charms on here that represent everything I love in life. I have a
croissant on there. I had, they don't have Diet Coke, but I put a regular Coke bottle on there.
Popsicles, seashell for the beach. Um, on my other one, I have an avocado cause I'm obsessed
with codos and like, it's just a nice way to personalize my feet.
These are really cool, actually.
So maybe I'll put a link to these in the description or the show notes.
But anyway, so I'm like wearing these Crocs with these charms all over them.
I'm wearing these bike shorts with a lightning bolt.
This Guns N' Roses t-shirt.
I don't know what's going on, but whatever.
Regardless, I've got a insane case for you today, guys.
Now, we all know that the case of the financial fraudster and fake German heiress, Anna Delvey,
took the world by storm and even inspired the Netflix hit series that people couldn't
stop talking about.
And she just kind of became a sensation internet sensation with
the memes with everything like pure gold but more than that people were just captivated by her scheme
to secure a 22 million dollar loan all to start an art foundation by pretending to have a german
trust fund worth over 40 million dollars now if you've never heard of that case, the craziest part of it
was that she jumped through so many hoops, flying by the seat of her pants the entire way, and it
was all for nothing because she never even got the money for the foundation. Before the loan was
approved, Anna's lies, her forgery, and her financial misgivings all caught up to her, and she was
arrested for fraud and exposed to the entire
world. But now Anna hold my beer because there is a new scammer in town and some people say that she
blows Anna out of the water because unlike Anna she actually ended up securing a mind-blowing
amount of money from the banking giant J.P. Morgan, so much so that she is now facing nearly 100
years in federal prison. So move over, Anna Delvey, because in this episode, we're discussing
Charlie Javis. Which also, let me just pause really quick here and say this. I feel like if
for some random reason, Anna Delvey actually ends up listening to this podcast ever in her life
she's going to be like super pissed off at the comparison so I'm sorry Anna and you are welcome
on the podcast anytime to tell your side of the story would absolutely love to have you here but
did Charlie really pull off one of the largest financial bank heists in American history or was
this all just some huge misunderstanding that spiraled out of control?
For those of you watching on YouTube, comment along and tell me all of the red flags that you
see in this story because it does have a huge twist to it. And then there's a new woman on the
scene, Charlie Javis. She was a hot shot in the startup world. You could find her on Forbes 30 under 30 list and all other hip tech
young startup spaces. She founded a company called Frank. Now to a high profile fraud case that's
literally happening in front of us in real time. These are very serious charges. When you look at
wire fraud and mail fraud, they can carry up to 30 years for each count. First, the Wall Street
Journal saying that J.P. Morgan is alleging that a company it purchased
is accusing it of fraud, effectively.
A college financial aid platform called Frank.
Getting financial aid might seem really, really complicated,
but at Frank, we've really simplified it for you.
Charlie Javis is a brown-haired, blue-eyed young woman behind the company called Frank,
a startup designed to help students navigate the notoriously complex and headache-inducing task
of figuring out college financial aid. Her vision was to simplify this process,
and in doing so, she caught the attention of J.P. Morgan, and we will get to that shortly.
First, we need to talk
about Charlie, how she rose to success, and her incredibly orchestrated house of cards.
In addition to Anna Delvey, maybe you could compare her to Elizabeth Theranos, the Theranos
lady. What's her name? Elizabeth Holmes, the drop of blood lady. I mean, girls, you are giving us a
bad name. So Charlie grew up in Westchester County, New York, a very
wealthy suburban county where she attended the French American School, a private school with a
hefty annual price tag. But things changed when the time came for Charlie to decide on college.
According to Charlie, she considered attending school in Canada in order to cut costs. However,
thanks to family help, sc
loans, she attended the W
at the University of Pens
from the outside looking
to get there looked preti
an acceptance rate of onl
was accepted during early
let's hear your story. Ri
you're an entrepreneur at heart.
We'll love to hear how you got to your current role
as founder and CEO of Frank.
Yeah, well, I'd have to say I was always really just guided
from the concept early on
that if you really do what you love,
you'll figure out a way to make money and do well and do good in your career at the same time.
And from a really early age, having grandparents that were Holocaust survivors, education was always kind of the first and most important thing in my family.
And I've been lucky to have been given the opportunity to attend world-class
institutions. And if you have the ability to pay it forward, it's one of the kind of best things
one can really do. And so that's kind of guided me all the way, but I would say sustainability
was also front and center. When I was before high school, I started a soup kitchen at my local high
school. And I think that kind of gave me the entrepreneurship bug of starting things after
being told no 10,000 times, whether it's insurance issues or just our school doesn't do that to a
bunch of different reasons to finally succeeding. And now it's in its 11th or 12
is fantastic. During her
in the spring of 2011, sh
startup called power up p
as a nonprofit and its mi
micro loans to entreprene
In just one month, Charli
had already partnered with
groups at 50 schools worldwide, which earned her a spot at number 99 on the list of most creative
people by Fast Company back in 2011. Charlie was hustling, reaching out to potential donors,
investors, and big-name schools like Harvard and Chicago Booth, Charlie had been on a non-stop tour,
drumming up as much interest and support as possible. The Poverup's then-COO seemed pretty
optimistic about the future of the company, and in a company-wide email back in 2012, they wrote,
Charlie has been whoring herself out effectively recently, and we have some potentially new and
exciting opportunities
coming our way. Now, according to some of Poverup's internal emails that Forbes magazine reviewed,
Charlie had been rubbing elbows with some really heavy hitters in the industry,
which led Charlie to getting her name mentioned in major media outlets in the financial industry.
The buzz about Charlie, this young, innovative college student, was so strong that it even got her an interview for the Thiel Fellowship in 2012.
This program gives $100,000 to students to either start a business or embark on a research endeavor.
Charlie was up against some pretty fierce competition, but apparently she ended up stepping back from the competition,
but apparently she ended up stepping back from the competition saying she wanted to continue her studies as reported by a tumblr post from someone
over at poverty however according to Michael Gibson a feel foundation veteran
he had a much different take on Charlie he said and I quote she was never
offered a fellowship and it bothers me that she is going around saying that
because of her personality we didn't trust that she is going around saying that. Because of her personality,
we didn't trust that she could get started in a real way. In 2013, Charlie graduated from Wharton with a degree in finance and legal studies, and she did so in only three years, which is extremely
impressive, guys. However, her startup, PoverUp, was no longer shaping out the way that she had once hoped.
Despite claims of partnerships with influential organizations and individuals promising major
growth, some of these collaborations were fabricated entirely or never actually played
out how Charlie said they would. This wasn't surprising to many of her classmates at Wharton
either, who described her as nice but that she had a tendency to name drop and portray herself as this larger-than-life image than what the reality really was and who she really was.
So after college, Poverup was done, and Charlie still had an overall excellent reputation as this innovative, brilliant, and influential businesswoman.
So she capitalized on that.
And from there, Charlie had another idea, this time for a job search product that she
called TAPT.
But as ideas evolved, the goal turned into instead developing an alternative to the traditional
FICO credit score, a system that lenders use to determine the amount they're
willing to loan potential borrowers. So to do this, she would need around $10 million in funding from
investors. However, this shift quickly hit a roadblock. Charlie found that getting the necessary
compliance approvals across different states for her product was more of a hurdle than expected. It required
way, way more than the $10 million in seed funding that she was trying to raise at the time.
On top of this, she was having major cash flow issues, like a $500,000 deficit type of cash flow
issue. And she was also having trouble paying her employees. So she decided to let all of the
employees go and she said that it was the hardest thing she ever had to do in an interview she gave.
And I bet it was because apparently many of these employees were close friends of her and some of
them still don't talk to her because of this to this day. So now Tapped was over but Charlie wasn't.
So now TAPT was over, but Charlie wasn't.
Later in 2017, Charlie relaunched the company, changed the name to Frank, and shifted its focus to simplifying the student loan application process and making higher education more accessible.
Charlie hired on a new co-founder and CTO named Addy Amasi in 2016.
and CTO named Addy Amasi in 2016. He and Charlie ended up having a falling out and he sued Charlie and the company for failing to pay him and failing to give him 10% in equity in the company frank
which he says that Charlie promised him after he joined. Charlie ended up being ordered to pay him
$35,000 and Charlie has never spoken about this publicly but it seems that she just kind of moved on.
Nothing was going to stop her from reaching the success that she wanted.
Now, the name Frank was supposed to make you feel like you were working with a trustworthy relative, an uncle or a cousin that you would possibly seek advice from.
seek advice from. In interviews, Charlie explained her vision for Frank, saying,
in an industry lacking honest players, we wanted to represent transparency, honesty, and a supportive presence for our users. That's why we chose the name Frank, as it symbolizes
honesty. But what we're about to get into, some people say, is straight up fraud.
some people say is straight up fraud.
Today's episode of Serialistly is brought to you by BetterHelp. Sometimes in life,
we are faced with really tough choices, and the path forward is not always clear. For me,
it was when I decided to leave my corporate job and pursue true crime full-time. I had a lot of different fears and honestly I just felt like
I needed to talk through them with someone who had a neutral opinion. Somebody who wasn't my husband,
a family member, or even a close friend. I just needed to get all of the fears and worries off
my chest and see if it really was the right decision for me to make. It's helpful to not
only talk with somebody in a judgment-free space, but it's great for learning positive coping skills and empowering you to be
the best version of yourself by talking through things with a therapist. BetterHelp connects you
with a licensed therapist who can take you on that journey of self-discovery from the comfort
of wherever you are. Therapy also isn't just for those who have experienced
any sort of major trauma or feel like they need severe healing. I personally continue going to
therapy because I find it so helpful even just using it as a maintenance tool when things happen
to be going great in my life. It just really helps keep things sharp and stay positive and really
brings things back to check in with myself.
What I love about BetterHelp is it's entirely online, designed to be convenient, flexible,
and suited to my schedule, which is perfect for me. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist, and if you aren't vibing with your therapist for any reason,
it's totally okay and you can switch therapists at any time
for no additional charge. Let therapy be your map with BetterHelp. Visit betterhelp.com slash
AE today to get 10% off your first month. That's betterhelp.com slash AE.
Each year, there is a whopping $150 billion in federal student aid that is up for grabs.
This pot includes grants, loans, and work-study opportunities.
But to get a slice of that, students need to fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or also known as FAFSA for short, which I'm
just going to call it FAFSA. In a survey of 2,000 undergrad students and their parents about whether
they filled out the FAFSA form, it turned out that only 25% of undergrads finished the FAFSA
in the first month that it was open. Even more surprising, only 77% of them ended up completing it at all.
Now, not doing the FAFSA means missing out on some big opportunities.
Federal grants are basically free money for college.
The personal finance site NerdWallet looked over the numbers and found that students eligible for Pell Grants left $2.6 billion in free FAF billion college aid on the table
because they didn't submi
this got the wheels turni
thinking. She studied the
numbers. We think there's
a private company to comp
and really handhold peopl
in a scalable,
sustainable way and know that this is a company that stands for a positive mission where we could
really get behind this. And that's what we're building here. So I totally understand. I mean,
first of all, it's incredibly confusing for the average person to be able to go in and even dissect
everything you just said, unpacking what exactly the government is interested in and understanding the way the bank is making their nickel,
understanding exactly sort of why the college
isn't your friend financially
because they're looking to make money too.
So all of that stuff is all interesting,
but I think what you're saying
in terms of that guided process is,
help me understand when I hire your firm
to help me figure all this stuff out,
like what is it that you're actually doing for me and my family to make sure that I'm
able to get my kids the best possible financial route to college education?
So the first step with financial aid is looking at FAFSA, and that's the Free Application
for Federal Student Aid.
This one form is responsible for determining how much money you as a family are expected
to contribute towards
your college education. And that form has been a policy issue for the past 20 years. The formula
that is what is important in this form when you input the information spits out this magic number
called your EFC, this expected family contribution. And it seems like a black box,
so no one understands it. And it's worse because in order to get this number that no one understands,
you have to go through hours of pain and labor to be able to submit your information. So what we do
is make the FAFSA form, and this is the first product, a lot easier, and people are finishing it in under five minutes.
And so it's really easy. It's available on your phone, which, you know, with smartphone penetration today is extremely important.
Many people don't want to go to the library to find a desktop or to their school.
So this is where they are, and we reach them there. Super easy to use. Her ambition to turn her startup into an Amazon for higher education, so to speak, or even a TurboTax, but for financial aid, turned out to be quite an idea.
But at first, Charlie had some challenges in convincing investors that this would actually work.
And the major roadblock, and you might hear it from other female entrepreneurs who are trying to pitch like tampon companies or like underwear, who knows, but male investors just don't know about that whole segment of the market.
Now, try and take a segment of the market where investors who are usually wealthy have inherited it or made their money have zero exposure to FAFSA or the financial aid process. And so it's almost like take odds where you might have 15,
20% female investors. Now flip it to people where literally maybe one person out of the
hundreds I've spoken to has had personal exposure with it. And that's the largest roadblock. In
terms of female, I'd have to say I've had amazing male mentors in my life. And I think when you get
to a position where you are so early on it actually makes you kin
earn respect a lot earlier
the roadblocks you may ha
up. But Charlie quickly o
and two well known billio
financial tech industry b
for frank. They too saw w
idea that would immensely help
American families. So with funding from her early investors, Frank became a reality and this was
extremely impressive to outsiders looking in. You have this girl against all odds and now she has
the financial backing of billionaires who believe in her vision. Charlie ran into an issue
later in 2017 when the Department of Education accused Frank of potentially misleading customers
to believe that Frank was affiliated with the U.S. government or part of federal financial aid for
students. Frank later had to change its web address and clarify that they were not official government partners,
and that was as a result of a settlement in 2018.
Charlie's attorney at the time commented that it was just an issue of trademarks and nothing more.
Frank also raised some eyebrows in the education sector.
In 2017, a New York Times op-ed that was written by Charlie was later edited to include correction due to
inaccuracies in the way that she depicted the free application for federal student aid,
also again known as the FAFSA process. The same process Charlie said her company simplified and
claimed to know so much about. Why were edits now needing to be made? But after that, everything seemed to be smooth sailing for Charlie.
Frank started exploding.
By October of 2018, Frank raised $16 million in funding,
and it helped more than 300,000 students receive $7.5 billion in federal financial aid.
In November 2018, Charlie was named in Forbes 30 Under 30 in finance.
She was really climbing the ranks and making a huge name for herself and for her company,
which landed her many opportunities to be featured on many news segments and talk shows,
all to talk about Frank and further spread the word about her company.
This is an acronym that looms large in the lives of many families.
FAFSA.
F-A-F-S-A.
My kids are 16 thinking college.
Your kids are a little bit younger, but everyone's thinking college.
Yeah.
And there's so much to learn about this, including the fact that the choice of your kid's major
could affect the loan rate they get if they're borrowing money to go to school.
But don't worry.
We have someone here that can help us with everything that we
need to know. Let us introduce you to Charlie Janfies, founder and CEO
with WithFrank.org, a company that helps students with the financial aid process.
Thank you so much for being here with us. It all starts with FAFSA, right? Walk us
through that. Oh man, yes. So everything, the first step is FAFSA. FAFSA is
the free application for federal student aid and it unlocks thousands of dollars for families.
And so it's loans, it's grants, it's scholarships, and it's really the one application that you need
to do to get access to all that aid. And who should apply, who should file the FAFSA? Because
as you know, there's so many six-figurefigure income families in our region I mean that's a Metro North
conductor married to a veteran cop right oh yes so we like to say there's no one
to pour to file FAFSA or too rich to file interesting and so if you have a
household income that's probably two hundred and fifty thousand dollars or
under you should likely apply that being said
if it is over you still have opportunities for scholarships and
grants so it's for everyone so take the few minutes it takes to apply and really
see what you're eligible for because that's the best starting point you can
get before going to college so your company with Frank doc org is about two
years old you've already helped about $7 billion in funds for higher
education. And the best part is it is free for the consumer and the students that are signing up. So
how does this all work? Yes. So it's totally free. That's really important to us for all students to
benefit from. So a student takes a picture of their tax returns. Then we do all the tax math
for you. So no math errors that can put you into very complicated verification,
very simple language.
We take a flow that might take hours with the federal government,
and most students take four minutes with us.
So that's more or less how it works.
You see how much you're eligible for, then you can go to school,
feel confident, see what your bill is, and then figure out the gap to help you.
In 2019, Charlie was named in Crane's New York Business 40 Under 40.
But the following year, Charlie ran into another issue.
In 2020, bipartisan Congress members raised concerns about Frank's supposed deceptive practices.
And they asked the FTC, also known as the Federal Trade Commission, to investigate.
The worry was that Frank might be creating a sense of a false optimism and even confusion
among students and potentially profiting off the data obtained from these misled
students. In response to these allegations, the FTC issued a warning
letter to Frank suggesting that the company may have misled students about
acquiring relief funds related to the coronavirus.
One financial aid expert said, and I quote,
their assertion that the FAFSA could be completed in four or five minutes wasn't entirely accurate.
It was somewhat quicker since they omitted questions from the FAFSA,
but the problem is those questions are crucial for some college-bound students.
But none of this affected Charlie,
her company, or her pitches to investors, who were still interested in getting to know more
and investing their money in the company, or consumers using Frank. Actually, quite the
opposite. At the start of 2021, Frank's website stated that its user base had now reached a staggering 4.26 million students. Charlie was
now only 28 years old and had raised 20 million dollars in funding for Frank. So Charlie approached
J.P. Morgan, who I'm just going to refer to as JMPC now moving forward. She approached them in
the summer of 2021. At an initial meeting in July of 2021, Charlie told JPMC that Frank had
significant engagement with college-aged students, a market segment that JPMorgan wanted to grow.
Charlie stated that Frank had 4.25 million users, defining a user as an individual who created a
Frank account by entering a first name, last name, email address, and phone number
on the Frank website. She distinguished these users from website visitors, representing to the
JP Morgan diligence team that since 2017, Frank had more than 35 million visitors to its website.
Charlie brought all of the documentation that she had to back this up in this meeting. She included a spreadsheet with
a column labeled FAFSA in process, showing that 4.265 million students had started a FAFSA form
with Frank, which of course required creating an online account with Frank. And she also showed
that more than 2.1 million students fully completed the FAFSA form through Frank. She went through all of the nitty-gritty details.
She worked hard to persuade J.P. Morgan to see Frank like she did and like the investors did,
explaining every question that they had and anticipating the next one. Based on the July
21st meeting and the documentation that she brought with her, J.P. Morgan confirmed Frank's
definition of its customers and users who created a Frank account.
After reviewing the details further, J.P. Morgan agreed to explore a potential acquisition.
Then, Charlie was offered a deal that would change her life as she knew it. J.P. Morgan
was interested in Frank and wanted their company to build stronger connections with students and
their families by acquiring it. At that time,
Frank was estimated to be able to reach over 4 million students across 6,000 different educational
institutions very, very quickly. Part of the deal was that Frank would keep its branding and Charlie
would now work at J.P. Morgan as head of student solutions in J.P. Morgan's digital products teams.
student solutions in JPMorgan's digital products teams. And Charlie was ecstatic by this. This was the goal that she always had dreamed of. And now it was finally happening. And she was about to
have a major payday. JPMorgan wanted to buy Frank for $175 million. Of course, with a company such
as JPMorgan, they weren't going to just take Charlie's word for everything that she had said at that earlier meeting and then shell out $175 million. So
during the due diligence process regarding Charlie's claim of the 4.26 million customer
accounts, J.P. Morgan asked Charlie for a detailed list of Frank's accounts. This list was to include
crucial data such as first names, last names, dates of birth, phone numbers, mailing addresses, and email addresses.
J.P. Morgan specifically asked the following questions to Charlie.
How many customer accounts have 100% of the below data?
How many customer accounts have partial information?
And of partial records, what percent include each data field below? J.P. Morgan told
Charlie that these were critical details that needed to be confirmed due to diligence requests
and that they were necessary for proceeding with the acquisition of Frank, which is no big deal
and totally reasonable. But there was only one teeny, teeny, tiny little problem. Frank didn't
have over 4 million customers and there was no way
that Charlie was going to be able to comply with this. And the lid was about to be blown off
Charlie's entire scheme. All right besties, I'm gonna get straight to the point. You've heard me
tell you before and I am telling you, that getting out of debt is hard.
It adds up, adds up, and then you find yourself only paying the interest and never being able to get yourself out of the quicksand that is debt.
I mean, how many of you wish that there was a better solution to paying off your debt?
I know I do.
Well, PDS Debt has customized 0% interest options for anyone struggling with credit cards personal
loans collections or medical bills pds debt is giving our qualified listeners a free debt savings
analysis just for completing the 30-second online debt assessment at pdsdebt.com slash save you will
receive a full breakdown on how to save on interest each month and the quickest way to take care of your debt.
So if you're making payments every month on your debt and your balances just are not going down, this program is for you.
PDS Debt rolls all of your payments into one low 0% interest monthly payment.
It is so easy.
Everyone with over $10,000 or more in debt qualifies, and get this, there is no minimum credit score required. Both bad and fair credit are accepted. Save thousands in interest and fees, and quick and easy debt assessment at pdsdebt.com slash save that's pdsdebt.com slash save
Charlie initially refused to turn over the customer data claiming that she
couldn't do that because of the sensitive nature and privacy concerns
for the customers and their data,
especially if the deal fell through.
Now J.P. Morgan would have all of her business' information.
But that wasn't the real reason. A good excuse, yes, but not the real reason.
Charlie had previously gone through negotiations with another company before J.P. Morgan.
When they saw Frank's actual numbers, they backed out of the deal completely.
J.P. Morgan agreed to have a third numbers, they backed out of the deal completely. JP
Morgan agreed to have a third party validate the customer list and the information so that
Charlie wouldn't have any of these privacy concerns that she was claiming to have. So
now, the ball was back in Charlie's court, and it was all up to Charlie. She had a choice
– either tell the truth and risk losing the deal, or get as many customers as quickly as possible to
reach 4.26 million and she had balls and she chose the latter the only problem
now was there was quite literally no way in hell for her to do that because the
real number of customers was less than 300,000 yes she was claiming 4.2 6
million customers and in reality she had less than 300,000 so she was claiming 4.26 million customers, and in reality, she had less than 300,000.
So she was going to have to make up fake information, fake data accounts, fake customer accounts for millions and millions of users that also had to be vetted all in order to get this deal to push through.
It is insane.
And let me just say, if getting real customers was that easy and was
possible to begin with, then she wouldn't be in this predicament in the first place.
So Charlie concocted a plan. Charlie and her chief growth officer, Oliver Amar, initially
approached Frank's director of engineering. They did this to generate fabricated customer details
using synthetic data produced by computer algorithms. Feeling uneasy by this, the engineer
questioned Charlie and Oliver about the legality of this request. Charlie tried to convince the
engineer that she wasn't asking him to participate in any illegal activity. However, the engineer
wasn't convinced and chose not to participate in this scheme, instead offering to provide Charlie with Frank's actual customer
account list, which, like I just said, amounted to fewer than 300,000 accounts as of July 31st,
2021. Charlie didn't take no for an answer. She just needed someone else now. So Charlie sought
help from a data science professor at a college in the new york city area who promoted his creative solutions
to data related issues charlie handed over a list of a little over 290 000 individuals who
had initiated or submitted a fafsa application through frank she then had the professor generate
4.265 million customer names, birthdays, and other personal details based
on the list that Charlie provided.
And Charlie and this professor also went over their plan via email with each other.
Their goal was to sample first names and last names independently and then ensure none of
the sample names were real.
For their addresses, the professor told Charlie that he couldn't find
addresses in his files and asked if he should make them up. Charlie said that's fine, but she
wouldn't want the street to not exist in the state. But the professor figured out that creating real
addresses may not be doable because the addresses he was getting from the white pages from
whitepages.com had missing fields. So Charlie just said, okay,
well, if we can't do real addresses, what's the best we can do? And they found another way.
Whenever the professor reviewed all of the fake data that he made up, he noticed that it might
be suspicious that some of the customers were living, attending high school, and attending
college all in the same town and state even telling charlie look this would look
really fishy to me if i was auditing this but charlie was apprehensive about the email addresses
she asked the professor if the email addresses looked real with an eye check or if it would be
better to use a unique id and he said yeah they will look fake so they decided to create a unique
email for all 4.26 million fake customers.
The professor also had trouble adding certain college names to the list, so Charlie suggested
a perfect workaround of sorts, randomly assigning a college within the same state.
He also told Charlie that the initial data she gave him had the same phone number listed
for 676 people. Charlie just
said he needed to double check that the duplication wasn't more than five to seven percent. So somehow,
some way, the professor created a list of 4.265 million fake customers, all with fake information,
and she sent that list over to a third-party vendor who would validate the list while Charlie was working on this fake list her CGO Oliver
was busy reaching out to ASL marketing this is a marketing firm that claims to
have the most comprehensive and accurate and responsive data of high school
students college students and young adults that's available anywhere. So Oliver purchased a list of 4.5
million students for $105,000. But it was too late to use that information now since Charlie
had already submitted that list to the third party for vetting. Until then, Charlie would just have
to wait and see if her plan worked and if she could pull off tricking this third-party vendor into validating her list.
And get this, guys. Somehow, it worked. I don't know how, but it worked. And as soon as Charlie
got the news that the third party validated the list, Charlie told the professor to destroy the
list and not give J.P. Morgan anything else. And that was the end of it the professor sent Charlie an invoice
for $13,000 for his work and included the line items for every data point he
created like names emails birthdays etc and Charlie immediately sent it back
said to resend it for $18,000 and said just put data analysis on the invoice
and the professor did that now i know what charlie did
was highly illegal but you kind of have to laugh that the professor sent an invoice with the line
items of what he helped create in their fake customer list you know charlie had to be like
uh you literal imbecile why the hell would you give me an invoice for the description of the
crimes that we just committed and i think that's why she sent it back with a higher amount kind of like paying him off being like oh no no
I'm not going to pay 13 grand I'm going to pay 18 grand but change the description to just data
analysis let's not outline the crimes itself now although that might be the pot calling the kettle
black because how smart was she to be emailing back and forth with the plans also it's like now you covered it up in the invoice but what about all of the digital documentation of you guys
emailing back and forth to hatch the plan in the first place but whatever to each their own so
shortly after this third party vendor finished their validation process and with jp morgan now
happy they were ready to move forward with the deal, with this acquisition.
After signing the merger agreement, Charlie called the data science professor again.
This time, she wanted him to cooperate with another third-party vendor called Information
with an E, and she wanted to do this to secure more email addresses to supplement the ASL
list that Oliver had purchased.
Charlie decided to buy this additional email data knowing full well that JP Morgan had
always planned to market its products and services to both existing Frank users and
future student accounts.
She also knew that after closing, JP Morgan would request the Frank customer data file
and she was more than willing to make that happen.
So finally, September 14,, 2021, JPMorgan officially
closed on the deal to buy Frank. And Charlie and the CGO Oliver Amar would now be employees at JPMorgan.
So it's funny because when I told my mom the news, she said, of course JPMorgan bought Frank.
You said they would be your number one when you started the company.
And what really attracted me, honestly, was the people.
I started this company and one of my favorite parts of the job is working with amazing people from all different backgrounds.
And what was truly amazing was the leadership to daily managers.
Everyone just had such different perspectives.
You know, I probably met one or two men in the process.
The bank is run by two really fantastic women.
And a lot of the leadership is just so inspiring.
So that really was what drove me to make that decision.
And, you know, from a secondary perspective,
I believe Chase is at least the largest bank in the U.S. serving over 60 million
customers in the States, which is just huge. And so I could not think of a better platform to
accelerate our impact, multiply it, and really get to the next level in terms of helping students
get better access to college in the U.S.
Jamie Dimon declared last year he planned to get more aggressive in seeking takeovers,
and he certainly made good on that promise with J.P. Morgan buying another financial startup.
This time it's college financial planning platform.
Frank, CNBC.com's Hugh Sun has the exclusive details on the story, and he joins us now.
Hugh, why this deal?
The short answer is what they're getting is a software platform that's been pretty effective
at serving people, young people who are heading to college and need to try to pay for it. So
it's got a bunch of tools. The biggest, I think the main tool is an automated service that helps
students apply for federal aid. And so it's got that. It's also got a platform where they can, you know,
apply for discounted college courses, scholarships,
negotiate their federal aid that they've gotten
and other things.
So basically, you know, what they've got is, you know,
this tool that has grown a pretty good user base.
It's got 5 million users. And, you know, J.P. Morgan
wants to get in on that. They want to basically have an affinity program, essentially, that,
you know, as you're thinking about attending college, you've got to chase, you know, if all
goes according to plan, you've got to chase bank account. And after that, you know, if you graduate,
perhaps you're going to add a credit card, mortgage and auto. So this is their play to sort of get people hooked into the Chase ecosystem
at an early age. Which may explain why they see so much value, potential lifetime value here for
what otherwise would be a smallish size transition, transition transaction. Same for the one that they
did with the Gats the other day. Should we expect bigger moves, things that would really move the
needle? Which as a side note, I have no idea why that reporter was having such trouble with her
words that day. So Charlie wrote this on her LinkedIn account. It's not every day that an
entrepreneur gets her fairy tale new beginning, not ending. For me personally, I will continue
to lead Frank as part of the JP Morgan Chase team as managing director and head of student solutions.
It feels full circle as I think about how years ago I opened my first checking account with Chase as I went off to college.
And now, 10 years later, with Chase credit cards, mortgage, investment, and business accounts in hand, here I am, Frank, a JPMC company. I could
not have reached this milestone without my amazing team, board members, investors, and favorite
partners. What binds us together is still very much our shared values of doing the right thing.
Charlie and Oliver weren't worried that they had submitted a fake list to this third-party vendor because their
plan was to use the list that Oliver had purchased of the most comprehensive and accurate and
responsive data of high school and college students and young adults available anywhere
for $105,000. That list, along with the new list that Charlie bought. Almost four months after the deal closed in January of 2022, JPMorgan wanted
that customer data list. Charlie and Oliver had swapped out the fake list with this new list from
the ASL and from that company Mformation with an E. For them, now there was no problem. There was
no harm, no foul. They were getting a legit list now. Frank got its $175 million investment, and Charlie would still be running Frank and could fix everything.
Of the $175 million, Charlie received $21 million in direct proceeds, and she moved to Miami Beach, Florida.
In her employment agreement, she bargained for an additional $20 million in retention bonus,
bargained for an additional $20 million in retention bonus, and that was payable if she remained employed with J.P. Morgan through the vesting dates and complied with J.P. Morgan's
code of conduct. Oliver received $5 million in direct proceeds. In his employment agreement,
he bargained for a retention bonus of $3 million. They knew that Frank would keep growing and that
J.P. Morgan wouldn't notice, or so they had naively hoped. They never imagined that
all hell was about to break loose. I wasn't able to find out exactly when JP Morgan was going to
move forward with their marketing campaign with the Franks client list, but it was after January
and before June of 2022. Unsurprisingly, the result of the marketing test campaigns were a complete and utter
disaster. JPMorgan sent marketing test emails to what they believed were 400,000 unique frank
customers. Of the individuals contacted, only 28% of emails were delivered, compared to a 99% delivery rate that they usually see with similar
campaigns. Just 1.1% of the delivered emails were open compared to 30% for a typical JP Morgan
campaign. So after this, they immediately knew that something was wrong and they started
investigating. Oliver was fired on October 26, 2022, and Charlie was fired on
November 4, 2022. JPMorgan had just been humiliated into buying a company for $175 million,
and now they were going to go full scorched earth on these two fraudsters' asses. JPMorgan buys the company. They buy Frank,
believing it had over 4 million users based on the list that they received from her and her company.
Then after they bought it for $175 million, they find out the actual number of customers
never even exceeded 300,000. How in the world does this happen? How does JP Morgan, right,
one of the biggest, smartest global investment banks out there, somehow not figure this out
before they lay down 175 large? In a lawsuit they filed against Charlie, Oliver, and the company
Frank in December of 2022, they made the following claims. Charlie founded a small startup business
known as Frank that seemingly had the potential to grow and founded a small startup business known as Frank that seemingly
had the potential to grow and become a successful enterprise in the future and appeared to have had
an early proven success rate. But to cash in, Charlie decided to lie, including lying about
Frank's success, Frank's size, and the depth of Frank's market penetration, all in order to induce JPMorgan to purchase Frank for $175 million.
Then, when JPMorgan specifically requested proof of that claim during due diligence,
Charlie used synthetic data techniques to create a list of 4.265 million fake customers. A list of
names, addresses, dates of birth, and other personal information
for 4.26 million students who actually did not exist. In reality, Frank was nearly 4 million
users short. After the unusually poor returns from the marketing campaign, J.P. Morgan reviewed
various aspects of Frank's business. As a result of its review, J.P. Morgan
discovered the fake customer list and the ASL list. J.P. Morgan has compared those lists to
Frank's actual customer list and examined emails, messages, and chats among Charlie,
the data science professor, and Oliver. Those documents leave no doubt the fake customer list and the ASL list did not contain
the first name, last name, address, and phone number for actual Frank customers. Frank files
and data do not include any list or database of 4.265 million real students who actually used
Frank to start a FAFSA form. That list does not exist. In every aspect of her interactions
with J.P. Morgan, Charlie had a choice between revealing the truth about her startup and
accepting Frank's actual value and lying to inflate Frank's value and reaping the rewards
from that inflation. Charlie chose each time to lie and the evidence shows that time and time again she layered fraud upon fraud to deceive JPMorgan.
They also go on to list all of Charlie's public tweets.
On January 17, 2021, she tweeted,
We put students first and over 4.25 million students trust Frank for financial aid help.
On February 1, 2021, she tweeted,
we're working on it at Frank. 4.25 million students down, 10 million more to go. The next day on
February 2nd, 2021, she tweeted, because schools don't teach it, we've engaged over 4 million
students on how to pay for college. A week later, on February 10, 2021, she tweeted,
Fill out your FAFSA form for free from your phone in an average of 5 minutes.
Over 4 million students trust Frank to help navigate financial aid.
On February 16, she tweeted,
When academics tell us Frank is not the answer, all good.
4 million plus students think we are.
Then on May 8, 2021, another tweet
reading, super proud of the team at Frank and thankful for the 5 million plus families
who trust us every day. On June 21st, 2021, a tweet that reads, should have it up and running
for the 6 million plus families we serve for next FAFSA form opening. They also listed archived versions of Frank's
website from July 8th, July 26th, July 31st, August 11th, and August 13th of 2021, where it
was advertising why 4.25 million students chose Frank. Also, quick and easy apply for aid in under seven minutes. And safe and secure bank level security.
Also, human support, happy people always.
Additionally, J.P. Morgan also included charts that Charlie used during initial presentations,
showcasing very clearly that she was saying she had over 4 million users.
When Charlie and Oliver initially approached the
director of engineering for making a fake list and he questioned whether creating and using such a
data set was legal, Charlie said that she did not believe that anyone would end up in a orange
jumpsuit over this project. Then the lawsuit went into emails that they found between Charlie and
the data professor, which I referenced earlier.
And they even found the original invoice that he sent Charlie for that time that he spent making up customer data and performing these college major generations and generation of all features except for the financials, while creating the first names, last names, emails, phone numbers, and looking into white pages.
Remember, all of the line item data in the invoice. The lawsuit also went into how they
first suspected that something was off, saying J.P. Morgan first noticed irregularities with
the list when a J.P. Morgan employee observed that the list contained exactly 1,048,576 rows,
1,048,576 rows, which is the maximum permitted by Microsoft Excel. That number also did not correspond to any number of customer accounts previously identified by Charlie or others at
Frank for any given time period. J.P. Morgan raised this issue with individuals at Frank.
A member of the marketing team at JPMorgan wrote an email to Charlie and
another Frank employee stating, and I quote, I can also confirm that there are 1,048,575 records
plus the header row. One observation, that is the maximum number of rows allowed in Microsoft Excel.
Can we be sure that this is just a coincidence or maybe there is some data hidden
after that row? On January 24th, 2021, a Frank engineer responded to this Chase retail marketing
team member stating that we looked into the issue with the first file that we sent. The marketing
team wanted me to upload another file for you. From what I understand, this file is additive to
the previous file. These are our FAFSA application
specific users, and this additive file contained the significantly smaller population data for
approximately 135,000 individuals. Then they say, in June of 2022, J.P. Morgan conducted a comprehensive
investigation into Frank and the merger. That investigation revealed
the facts alleged in this complaint. JPMorgan has all of the emails showing the fraud that Charlie
and Oliver used Frank's email accounts to create the fake customer list and email accounts now
belong to JPMorgan following the merger. The bank closed Frank in January of 2023, and Chief Executive Jamie Dimon of J.P.
Morgan has called the acquisition a huge mistake. Which, no shit it was a huge mistake, but it gets
even weirder, guys. Charlie's lawyer, Alex Spiro, who also represents Elon Musk and Mick Jagger,
called the lawsuit against Charlie nothing but a cover and said that JPMorgan was just trying to
retrade the deal and now she is countersuing them. In a countersuit filed against JPMorgan in February
of 2023, her attorneys accused the bank of a massive cover-your-ass effort designed to shift
the blame for a failed and now regretted acquisition to
someone that they view as an easy target, its young female founder. Also part of the counterclaim,
Charlie says that JP Morgan compromised her reputation and wrongfully withheld nearly $28
million in retention payments and in equity. Charlie has also denied the bank's
accusations and said that it cannot prove its outlandish claims. Charlie insists she didn't
pull the wool over the bank's eyes. In her view, the accusations against her are simply payback
for the bank's own blunder of shelling out too much for something they can't put to good use,
or technology and data they simply don't
understand. In her counterclaim against the bank filed back in February, she describes herself as
an outsider whose youth and lack of institutional longevity made her an easy target. And in a
shocking twist, Charlie isn't arguing that the data was fake. Instead, she says that a Chase executive
asked her to fabricate the data, and so she did, and just complied with that.
What they've spelled out in their complaint, basically, they claim Charlie said during the
acquisition process, hey, we have over 4 million users. Users meaning someone who gave Frank their
email, their phone number, their name.
Then they buy the company.
They find out, oh, no, you actually only have 300,000 users.
But Charlie says that they're conflating users with user signups.
So she claims that she was always clear that only 300,000 people had actually given Frank their emails and that the 4.25 number was basically
web traffic. How this didn't come up in due diligence, well, you know, that's for regulators
to figure out. Okay. So let's say JP Morgan is right. Let's say the SEC is right. How do they
think she did this? Was the whole company corrupt? So there's actually not that much dispute over at a certain point during due diligence.
Charlie hands J.P. Morgan a list of the supposed four point two million users.
Right. And everyone agrees that that list was fake. It's a question of how you justify why it was fake.
So J.P. Morgan says, well, it was a
fake list because she never had 4.25 million users. And Charlie Javis says, well, it was fake
because I was using synthetic data. I could not give you my existing customers' personal
information. So I was using algorithmically generated fake data designed to closely resemble the actual data. So you could
analyze the demographic characteristics of the customer base, the potential customer base,
without actually betraying the privacy of any people who had actually signed up.
So I'm amazed by this in the same way that I'm amazed by Elizabeth Holmes,
that someone could have the ability to pull something like this off.
J.P. Morgan says, you know, there were red flags, but there's other people who said there were red flags in this woman's history for years and years that should have tipped people off.
She's up to no good. What can you tell us about that?
There were definitely some red flags.
So at a certain point when Frank first launched, they had the term FAFSA in their URL.
FAFSA meaning the Free Application for Federal Student Aid.
That is trademarked by the Department of Education.
And so the DOE reached out and was like, you know, there's reasonable concern that students could be confused that you're an affiliate of ours.
So she had to sort that out and remove FAFSA from the URL.
There was another situation where four members of Congress wrote to the FTC saying that they'd heard Frank was offering assistance with helping students apply for federal, for pandemic relief.
And they claimed that Frank was misrepresenting exactly what students stood
to gain from using their service. They claimed there were no fees. Turns out there maybe were
some fees and so on. And so then the FTC issued a warning saying, hey, you got to cut that out.
You got to fix the website. And so that was settled. And the FTC one was definitely public before the acquisition.
Sam Bankman-Fried, Elizabeth Holmes, now this woman.
Sometimes when things seem to be too good to be true, they are too good to be true.
In April of 2023, Charlie was arrested on federal fraud charges.
And she is now currently facing one count of conspiracy to commit bank and wire fraud
one count of wire fraud affecting a financial institution and one count of bank fraud each of
which carry a maximum sentence of 30 years in federal prison and one count of securities fraud
which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison. She was released on a $2 million bond.
And Charlie, if you find yourself listening to this, hello.
And also, what the hell were you thinking, girl?
Come on, girlfriend, get with it.
A complaint was also filed against her by the SEC.
The director of the SEC Enforcement Division said that this is old school fraud and they want her to be barred from leading a public company and be forced to pay back the money that she received.
In May of 2023, a grand jury indictment in Manhattan federal court charged her with the fraud charges and the conspiracy charges as well that she was arrested for.
It also seeks the forfeiture of millions of dollars from her
accounts. Charlie has pled not guilty to all charges. U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said,
and I quote, as alleged, Charlie engaged in a brazen scheme to defraud J.P. Morgan in the course
of a $175 million acquisition deal. She lied directly to J.P. Morgan and fabricated data to
support these lies, all in order to make over 45 million dollars from the sale of her company.
This arrest should warn entrepreneurs who lie to advance their businesses that their lies will
catch up to them and this office will hold them accountable for putting their greed above the law.
That is a very true statement. Cough, cough, Anna Delvey. Cough, cough, Elizabeth Holmes.
All of these women who are just like lying to try to bankroll a lavish lifestyle, which I kind of
feel like Elizabeth Holmes truly did believe that what she was doing would work out, but I mean,
that's a tale for another day. Charlie was recently in court in New York on June 6,
2023, and Charlie's lawyer, Alex Spiro, argued in a court filing that the Justice Department
has tactically requested the court to pause the SEC's civil suit to let the criminal case
progress first. He claims that this move is designed to gain an upper hand in the criminal
case, saying this allows the SEC and the prosecutor to play games
with Charlie while she battles to protect her freedom and career, that it robs her of a fair
shot to defend herself promptly in both cases. According to the filing, the SEC requested the
court for more time to hand over documents that Charlie claims are crucial to her defense. So
here's the big question here. Is this all just one enormous
mix-up and a scorned billionaire CEO wanting to find a scapegoat? Or did Charlie, a young
entrepreneur, manage to pull a huge fast one on JP Morgan, arguably the biggest banking titan
in the United States? What's the truth here? If you guys are watching
this on YouTube, I want to know what you guys think. So leave it in the comments. And if you're
listening to this on Spotify, I'm going to put up a poll. So make sure you vote on the Spotify poll
as well. Because I really want to know what you guys think about this. It is just wild to me that
she's counter suing and saying no, no, no, you guys told me to do this it's like that is a pretty
ballsy move so let me know what you guys think and what your opinion is in the comments I don't
know why but cases like this one and the Anna Delvey case and so many others and like Dirty
John they fascinate me so much anytime there's like a con woman a con man anything like that
I just get so fascinated by it I think for the same reason
that I get fascinated by cults because it's like I'm just so curious as to how these people have
the ability to brainwash to manipulate people and kind of curious as to how they have the balls to
do it too now while this one didn't end in murder thank god so many of them do like Dirty John which
I'm sure everybody has heard
about that case at that, at this point, and that actually happened right in my backyard, Newport
Beach. It's just unbelievable. So I'm curious, too, do those cases fascinate you? Because I
definitely will do more of them, not only here on the podcast, but over on my YouTube channel,
10 to Life, because for some reason, I can't get enough of cults and cons. Like con women, con men, I just
can't get enough. So if that's something that you guys want more of, let me know via the comments
because I always like diving into that stuff. Thanks for tuning into another episode of
Serialistly with me. I have some very, very exciting news coming up for you guys, so make
sure to be checking back for that. Also over on YouTube, we are almost at 1 million subscribers.
I can't believe it.
I'm going to be doing a massive, massive giveaway when we hit that.
But I do have some other exciting news coming up.
So make sure that you check back for that.
Please don't forget before you close your podcast app, give this podcast a quick rating
if you're listening on Apple.
And if you have 30 seconds, I would so greatly appreciate it if you would write a review.
It helps the algorithm.
It helps push the podcast out to more people.
And it's like a freeway, amazing way to support the podcast.
So please, thank you in advance for all of you who leave those reviews.
I greatly appreciate it.
Don't forget to get your free debt assessment analysis by visiting pdsdebt.com slash save
and to check out BetterHelp and get 10% off your first month at betterhelp.com slash save and to check out better help and get 10 off your first month at better help.com
slash ae both links will be in the show notes so i will be back with you next week for a brand new
wild ass true crime case besties but i actually might even be back before then with a bonus
episode but i guess you will have to wait and see so make sure that you are following the podcast
so that you get notified of those bonus episodes. All right, besties, thank you for tuning in today
again with me for another wild true crime case. I will be talking with you very, very soon. All
right, thanks again. This is your true crime bestie signing off. Have a great rest of your week. Bye.