Charlie Javis’ famous fraud trial has become a showcase of embarrassing failures on both sides. It is said that JPMorgan Chase was deceived by purchasing her startup, Frank, for $175 million when it only had 300,000 customers, not 4 million.
According to a new WSJ article, she recalled what she told him when former Frank engineer Patrick Vovre testified that he had rejected Javice’s request to create fake user data a week before the sale. When Vovor declined, Javice relied on a mathematics professor to generate synthetic user data and was reportedly submitted to JPMorgan. (In the court, Javice’s legal team portrayed Vovor as a minor corned suitor.)
In addition to JPMorgan’s failure to properly reject Frank’s user base, Leslie Wims Morris, who led the deal at JPMorgan, has sent a note to the team, highlighting the 2021 segment to investors from an annual letter from CEO Jamie Dimon, adding “do an analysis.”
Javice’s lawyer said in court that it was proof that JPMorgan didn’t think he needed to check the job, but Morris testified that it was “a joke to my team” written on the tongue on his cheek.