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- JPMorgan Chase no longer wants to pay Charlie Javice's legal expenses.
- The bank claims Javice's legal bills included excessive charges for food, alcohol, and travel.
- See a slideshow of some of the zanier expenses at the center of this dispute.
Gummy bears, ice cream, cookies, and martinis may sound like the makings of a holiday party, but they are among the expenses now at the center of a legal fight between JPMorgan Chase and convicted startup founder Charlie Javice.
Javice was sentenced to seven years in prison earlier this year over fraud tied to Frank, the financial aid startup she sold to JPMorgan in 2021 for $175 million. Despite that conviction, JPMorgan has been ordered to pay the legal bills of its former executive.
JPMorgan, which has already covered some $60 million in legal expenses for Javice, is now asking a Delaware Court of Chancery judge to relieve it of an additional $18 million in expenses.
It argued that Javice has abused the advancement system by running up excessive and improper legal expenses. Javice's lawyers have until January 5 to respond.
On Tuesday, Quinn Emanuel, which represents Javice in the Delaware case, pushed back, saying JPMorgan is "trying to walk away from its contractual obligation to pay Ms. Javice's legal bills."
The bank is "highlighting a handful of attorney expenses (not incurred by Ms. Javice) over two years, the vast majority of which it already reviewed and paid or are not disputed," Quinn Emanuel spokesman Eric Herman said.
See a list of some of the expenses JPMorgan has highlighted in its Delaware court filing:
"Copious amounts of alcohol"
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JPMorgan's Delaware chancery court filing complained that the bank was billed for "copious amounts of alcohol", including old fashioneds, Lychee martinis, and other "specialty cocktails."
The filing claims some of the booze expenses were linked to "a hotel bar and minibar."
It also complained of fees tied to "ground transportation from one bar or restaurant to another in one evening."
A $900 meal at Kolomon
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Kolomon was an Austrian-influenced French restaurant located in Manhattan's Ace Hotel that closed in August 2025. According to Thefork.com, its menu included Yellowfin tuna carpaccio for $29 and grilled wild mushrooms for $33.
$214 for "Italian inspired ice cream"
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$581 dinner for two that included a $161 seafood tower
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Cellulite butter
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A search for "cellulite butter" on Amazon results in a list of body lotions that promise to firm and tighten the skin.
$530 on gummy bears
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$347 for three charcuterie boards "for an afternoon snack"
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A Cookie Monster toddler toy
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$60 Uber Eats order for four cookies and a cookie box
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Transportation to the American Museum of Natural History — "on a Sunday"
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Transportation to dinner "after a walk across Central Park"
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Lavender and jasmine scented sachets
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A plastic cup
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