
Reported by Laura Italiano and Natalie Musumeci
Charlie Javice — the young tech entrepreneur accused of tricking the nation’s largest bank into paying $175 million for her college financial-aid startup — once had a lot to say about Theranos fraudster Elizabeth Holmes.
Javice called Holmes’ defrauded investors “sophisticated assholes,” and complained that “investors should be blamed,” according to a pair of WhatsApp messages that were discussed at a pretrial hearing in Manhattan on Tuesday.
When Javice and her ex-number two at their startup, Frank, go on trial for allegedly defrauding JPMorgan Chase later this month, federal prosecutors will be barred from making any mention of Theranos or Holmes, a judge ruled during the hearing.
And those WhatsApp messages between Javice and codefendant Olivier Amar, in particular, are definitely not coming into evidence, he said, unless either defendant opens the door by mentioning them on the witness stand.
The two WhatsApp messages are from 2022, “in the midst of their own efforts to defraud JPMC,” the government alleged in court papers last week, in asking the judge to allow the “highly probative” texts into evidence at a trial scheduled to begin February 18.
Federal prosecutors allege that over months of negotiations, Javice and Amar repeatedly lied to Chase about the success of Frank, a for-profit tech company that Javice launched at age 24 and which featured software to help students apply for college financial aid.
Read full report: https://www.businessinsider.com/frank-founder-charlie-javice-fraud-trial-jpmorgan-2025-2