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金融科技创始人诈骗案:法官判处七年监禁
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金融科技初创公司Frank的创始人Charlie Javice因在2021年被摩根大通收购时欺诈该银行而被判处七年监禁。Javice的Frank公司谎称拥有超过400万用户,但实际用户数量仅为30万。此次判决比Javice的律师提出的18个月刑期要长得多,也远低于检方要求的12年。除了监禁,Javice还被判需支付2.875亿美元的赔偿金,并没收超过2200万美元的非法所得。此案的判决可能对未来并购交易产生影响,表明即使收购方是大型银行,也无法完全规避欺诈风险。

⚖️ 金融科技公司Frank的创始人Charlie Javice因欺诈摩根大通而被判处七年监禁。此案源于Javice在2021年出售其公司时,夸大了公司的用户数量,谎称拥有超过400万用户,而实际用户仅约30万。

💰 Javice的刑期远超其律师的预期,并需支付巨额赔偿。除了七年监禁,她还被判处三年监督释放,并与共同被告一起承担2.875亿美元的赔偿责任,同时没收超过2200万美元的非法所得。

🏦 此案的判决结果可能对未来的并购交易产生深远影响。法官强调,即使受害者是像摩根大通这样的大型银行,并且其尽职调查可能存在疏忽,欺诈行为本身依然是不可被原谅的。这可能促使买家在并购交易中更加谨慎,但也可能在市场火热时,鼓励一些买家为了尽快达成交易而忽视潜在风险。

🚀 Javice的案例凸显了在快速发展的金融科技领域,创业者在追求增长和融资时,必须坚持诚信经营。夸大公司数据以获取更高估值或达成交易,最终可能导致严重的法律后果。

Fintech entrepreneur Charlie Javice leaves federal court in Manhattan after her conviction on four counts of defrauding JPMorgan during the 2021 sale of her financial aid startup, Frank.

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In today's big story, fintech wunderkind Charlie Javice didn't get much leniency on her prison sentence. That could say a lot about future deals in the space.

What's on deck:

Markets: How to cash in on M&A's revival.

Tech: The AI meant to save people time at work is sometimes creating even more headaches.

Business: Details on Starbucks' severance package for store managers.

But first, all rise.


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The big story

Doing time

Charlie Javice got in trouble because some of her startup's customers were fake. She's now facing some real consequences.

Javice was sentenced to seven years in prison on Monday, the culmination of a fascinating saga between the largest US bank and the founder of a once-buzzy startup it acquired.

It's significantly more than the 18 months Javice's legal team had been hoping for. Federal prosecutors, meanwhile, were aiming for a 12-year sentence. Javice could have been sentenced to up to 30 years in prison.

Just a few years ago, Javice and her student financial aid platform, Frank, were the talk of the town en route to accumulating some 4 million users. Eventually, JPMorgan came calling and acquired the startup for $175 million. The bank saw value in pitching Frank's college-aged user base on its banking products.

The only problem? Frank never had data for more than 300,000 users.

Javice was convicted this March on four counts of defrauding JPMorgan. Following her prison sentence, she will be subject to three years of supervised release. Along with her co-defendant Olivier Ama, Javice must pay $287.5 million in restitution. She also has to forfeit more than $22 million in ill-gotten gains.

Charlie Javice outside federal court in Manhattan.

Javice's sentencing could also have some wider implications.

One argument made by Javice's lawyers was that JPMorgan made a mistake when it was rushing to buy Frank during the frenzied dealmaking days of 2021.

JPMorgan's due diligence on the deal may have been lacking. But US District Judge Alvin Hellerstein said the victim's competency doesn't matter in a case like this.

"A fraud remains a fraud whether you outsmart someone who is smart or someone who is a fool," Hellerstein said.

The sentencing shows that even when the victim is a banking giant like JPMorgan — who the defense said should have known better — blaming the victim is little help, BI's Laura Italiano and Jacob Shamsian write.

It'll be interesting to see how that thinking influences future dealmaking. As M&A starts to ramp up, buyers could be emboldened to cut corners, knowing they have some protection against fraudsters.

Granted, no one wants to find themselves in a situation like JPMorgan was with Frank. But if dealmaking takes off the way it's expected to, you could see a company caught up in the feeding frenzy willing to overlook some things to get the deal they want.


3 things in markets

Electronic Arts logo displayed on a laptop screen and DualSense controller

EA + LBOs = comeback season. EA is going private as part of a $55 billion leveraged buyout with a consortium of investors. The news caused its stock to spike by 21%. It's the largest leveraged buyout ever, and the deal could signal an LBO resurgence. Meanwhile, experts are warning that the hiring landscape at investment banks isn't showing the same signs of revival.

Making the most of the dealmaking renaissance. Even before EA's colossal LBO, new data from Goldman Sachs showed the value of announced M&A is up 29% year over year. The bank expects a 15% increase in M&A deals in 2026. BI's Joe Ciolli shared how to adjust your portfolio to capitalize. Goldman also highlighted six stocks it thinks could be M&A targets.

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3 things in tech

We're drowning in AI slop. Generative AI tools were supposed to make our jobs easier. Instead, they've resulted in a lot of slop: stuff that looks like it gets the job done, but is full of errors upon closer inspection. That's created more work for humans who have to clean it up.

Anthropic's newest AI model is here. Claude Sonnet 4.5 launched Monday, and Anthropic is calling it the top coding AI system. It claims the new model can operate autonomously for up to 30 hours. See what else Anthropic said it can do.

Amazon Web Services wants to go organic. The company is seeking a more grassroots adoption of its AI apps, without leaning on the sales team. AWS's Q Developer lags behind its rivals, like Cursor and Windsurf, in organic adoption, according to an internal Amazon document obtained by BI. It highlights how the dynamics have shifted for AWS in the age of AI.


3 things in business

Starbucks is offering up to 26 weeks of severance for managers of closing stores. The company, which is closing 1% of its North American stores, detailed its severance offerings in a document viewed by BI. Retail workers generally don't get severance payments, though there have been exceptions.

Want to work for MrBeast? Pack your bags for college-town life. Greenville, North Carolina, isn't just MrBeast's hometown — it's the headquarters of his YouTube empire. Media workers often give up the big city life to work for YouTube's top star, but moving to the college town isn't for everyone. That's why some new hires get a "vibe check" period.

Marissa Mayer's AI startup is dissolving and being bought by … Marissa Mayer's new AI startup. Mayer's photo-sharing app Shine never really caught on, and now it looks like she's pivoting to the crowded field of AI personal assistants. BI's Katie Notopoulos mourns the Shine that could've been.


In other news

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Singapore, the UK, and Switzerland are the top destinations for the world's superrich to send their money, HSBC says.

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What's happening today


Dan DeFrancesco, deputy executive editor and anchor, in New York. Meghan Morris, bureau chief, in Singapore. Akin Oyedele, deputy editor, in New York. Grace Lett, editor, in New York. Amanda Yen, associate editor, in New York.

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Charlie Javice Frank JPMorgan Chase 金融科技 欺诈 判刑 并购 Fintech Fraud Sentencing M&A
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