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Industry | Technology |
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Founded | 2016 |
Founder | Charlie Javice |
Defunct | January 2023 |
Headquarters | New York City |
Parent | JPMorgan Chase |
Website | frankfafsa.com (archived) withfrank.org (archived) |
Frank was an American website for assisting students to fill out their FAFSA federal student aid applications. [1] It was launched in 2016 by 24-year-old Charlie Javice, who claimed to help students to complete more than 100 questions within a few minutes.
Frank was acquired by JPMorgan Chase in September 2021 for $175 million. In December 2022, JPMorgan Chase sued Javice and Frank’s chief growth and acquisition officer, Olivier Amar, for fraud, alleging that they vastly inflated the number of customers that the company had. The Frank website was shut down shortly after in January 2023. In April 2023 Javice and Amar were charged in Manhattan federal court with a four-count grand jury indictment for securities fraud, wire fraud, bank fraud, and conspiracy. [2] In March 2025, both were found guilty on all counts. [3] [4]
Frank was founded in 2016 by Charlie Javice, a graduate from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. [5] Javice, who was 24 years old at the time, said her goal was to reduce student debt. [1] [6] [7] [8] [9] In 2017, co-founder and chief technology officer Adi Omesy sued Javice and the company for wage theft and failure to award the promised equity; he received $35,000 as compensation per court order. [10]
The original website was frankfafsa.com. However, the term FAFSA was removed from the domain name in 2018 following a settlement with the United States Department of Education, which owns the trademark rights to the acronym. [8] Subsequently, Frank changed its domain name to withfrank.org.
In January 2018, Frank raised $10 million in funding from investors including Lemonade, WeWork, Bradley Tusk, and Marc Rowan, co-founder of Apollo Global Management. [11] At that time, Frank had 18 full-time employees in the United States and Israel. [1] [11] Javice was named as one of Forbes' 30 Under 30 [12] [13] and Crain's New York's 40 under 40. [7]
Frank's online tool simplified the FAFSA process, helping students fill out the application quickly. [1] [14] In addition to filing their FAFSA, students could also search for other scholarships and low-cost college courses. [14] The website was free to use, but students could pay for additional membership features such as access to Frank's financial support team and to a cash advance: up to $5,000 to cover tuition and other college costs while they waited for their financial aid to be approved with no interest. [1] [15] [11] Frank also helped students appeal financial aid decisions. [15]
In November 2020, the United States Federal Trade Commission issued a warning letter to Frank raising concerns that the "purported assistance to students consists primarily of providing a form letter that may lack the information a student would need to apply for one of the grants from his or her school." [8] [16]
Javice approached JPMorgan Chase in the summer of 2021 about a potential acquisition. [14] In September 2021, Frank was purchased by the bank for $175 million to deepen ties with college students as potential customers. [17] [18] [14] [6] [13] [8] Javice remained CEO of Frank and joined JPMorgan Chase as head of student solutions on the digital products team. [6]
Fifteen Frank employees were brought on as part of the acquisition, from mid-level associates to executive level. [18] As part of the acquisition, Javice received more than $9 million directly in stock proceeds and a $20 million retention bonus. [19] [8]
In December 2022, JPMorgan Chase sued Javice and Frank chief growth officer Olivier Amar for fraud, alleging that they lied to the bank by making up millions of fake student accounts to show that it had a successful, growing business. [14] [17] [20] The lawsuit was filed in a Delaware federal court. [14] Javice claimed that Frank had 4.25 million users. According to the lawsuit, the company had fewer than 300,000 in reality. [14] [17] [20] According to the lawsuit, Javice and Amar paid a data-science professor $18,000 to create a list of fake user-generated names and addresses in addition to purchasing a list of 4.5 million student names from a marketing firm. [14] [17] [20]
JPMorgan Chase claimed that it uncovered the fake user data when it launched an email-marketing campaign and more than 70% of the addresses that were allegedly Frank customers were not successfully delivered. [14] [13] The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged Javice with fraud, which was filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. [19] [20] Javice was arrested in April 2023 and has denied the allegations. [13] [20] [21]
In a counter lawsuit, Javice sued JPMorgan Chase for wrongful termination after the bank fired her in November 2022, alleging she was owed millions of dollars for expenses incurred while defending herself against internal investigations. [14] [22] [19] [23] She also claimed the bank violated student privacy laws. [17] In May 2023, a Delaware court ordered JPMorgan Chase to cover Javice's legal fees. [24]
JPMorgan Chase shut down the Frank website in January 2023. [13] [25]
In July 2023, Javice and Amar were charged with wire fraud, bank fraud, securities fraud, and conspiracy. [13] [26]
On March 28, 2025, both were found guilty on all counts. [3] [4]
On April 1, 2025, the court ordered Javice to wear an ankle monitor after prosecutors warned that she posed a flight risk. [27]
Javice and Amar, Frank's chief growth and acquisition officer and effectively its No. 2, were convicted on all four counts in their indictments, including conspiracy, bank fraud and wire fraud charges that are each punishable by up to 30 years in prison.
One striking bit of testimony came from Adam Kapelner, an associate professor of mathematics at Queens College, part of the City University of New York. As JPMorgan was performing due diligence, Ms. Javice told him she was in an "urgent pinch" and asked him to use "synthetic data" to create a list of over four million customers from a Frank list she supplied, which had fewer than 300,000 people on it. He asked why, according to his testimony, but she would not tell him. "I found my genius," she said in a text to Mr. Amar at the time. After Professor Kapelner did some quick work — including pulling an all-nighter — Ms. Javice asked him to remove any specifics about the data from his invoice and paid him $18,000 instead of the $13,300 on his original bill.