Charlie Javice Allegedly Committed the MOST Fascinating White Collar Crime

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024

Комментарии • 45

  • @nancya8262
    @nancya8262 Год назад +18

    I am not involved in anything illegal I'm a retired corporate type but I am FASCINATED by your channel and your content. I will tell you that the Charlie Javice story will keep me coming back. Please give us your insights on this one because I believe the Millennial generation feels "entitled" to having things their way and being able to say and do what they want because they think they are smarter than everyone else and they are used to being told how smart they are---getting a trophy for showing up. Please keep up updated on this case. Great channel and content; even for us boring dorky types.

  • @klaus9688
    @klaus9688 Год назад +11

    Highly interesting! And very impressive how you are delivering in the live talk setting!

  • @miamiamj
    @miamiamj Год назад +9

    Hi Justin
    Im very curious about what you think about Elizabeth Holmes stating she cannot pay $250 a month in retribution payments ? I have many thoughts about this.

    • @WhiteCollarAdviceOfficial
      @WhiteCollarAdviceOfficial  Год назад +6

      Okay I’ll film it today. So many have asked. I’ve titled it: Elizabeth Holmes-the video I didn’t want to make

  • @justinboisvert6290
    @justinboisvert6290 Год назад +2

    I've been waiting for this one. I love your content

  • @user-dn9vd9xg9p
    @user-dn9vd9xg9p Год назад +3

    I see referral fees as kickbacks. Physician fees, referral fees, whatever they refer to a kickback as now!

  • @user-dn9vd9xg9p
    @user-dn9vd9xg9p Год назад +2

    Hell review southern Mississippi crime lately in last ten years. Unbelievable what we have heard on the media. Tens of millions and we wonder why all of them are not sitting in the prison.

  • @nicholamc2629
    @nicholamc2629 Год назад +3

    Hi Justin great vid thank you! Have you heard anything about Elizabeth Holmes and how she’s getting on in her first few weeks? Would be so interesting to know! ❤

    • @WhiteCollarAdviceOfficial
      @WhiteCollarAdviceOfficial  Год назад +5

      Thank you for watching. Yes, I have some updates from clients at Bryan and am contemplating sharing in a way that is ethical, positive and not sensationalized. Still thinking of appropriate messaging.

    • @nicholamc2629
      @nicholamc2629 Год назад

      @@WhiteCollarAdviceOfficial That is brilliant, I look forward to it and really hope you do it soon! Love and respect to you. ❤️

  • @dougfredricks2017
    @dougfredricks2017 11 месяцев назад +2

    Charlie was IMO delusional and dazed in this era of Toxic social media.

  • @Nighthawk-8050
    @Nighthawk-8050 11 месяцев назад +2

    Hi Justin first of all love your videos. I need to ask you a question? I notice huge jump in white collar crimes especially among young people. Why in your opinion so many young people willing to throw their lives away to be something there not. Sam Bankman Fried is a perfect example. I hope you respond to my question. Thank you

  • @catherinegoulding4834
    @catherinegoulding4834 Год назад +1

    Would the American Justice System not be cheaper and better if defendants were taken straight to Federal Prison immediately after conviction? The American justice system seems to drag on forever and is very expensive.

  • @michaelmoorrees3585
    @michaelmoorrees3585 Год назад +1

    I've heard of the Charlie Javice case recently. She actually hired IT staff to "doctor" the numbers. I suspect a couple of those guys are "singing".

  • @sinebar
    @sinebar Год назад +1

    As a medical student I wouldn’t have thought that doctor was breaking the law but I will concede however, it was perhaps a little unethical. And I guess that should have been a clue.

  • @jeffeby2218
    @jeffeby2218 Год назад +2

    When you are charged, your case represents your reputation, your good name, and essentially your life. It is very, very important to you. But the prosecution sees it as one of many cases. Unless you are a celebrity or your case has become newsworthy and is being tracked in the national media, a prosecutor doesn't care about you personally at all. Prosecutors care about prosecuting the case as efficiently as possible to achieve the maximum consequence. That is their job. The judge in the case wants procedure to be correct, your rights protected, and justice for the victims. But when found guilty or when you plead guilty, everything changes. Your status is not defendant it is offender. You are no longer presumed innocent and your motivations presumed innocent. As an offender, you now are guilty and your motivations are now viewed under the general perspective that guilty offenders will say anything they can to minimize their sentence. The value of what you say drops almost to zero. It is your actions, especially in accepting responsibility, acknowledging the impact of your crimes, and doing what you can to make restitution to the victims that speaks the loudest. As discussed many times on this channel and elsewhere, your pre-sentence investigation report is critical. This is truly the point where your actions speak louder than words in determining the impact of being found guilty on your future.

    • @Sierrz
      @Sierrz 11 месяцев назад

      What if their are no victims?

  • @dicko7059
    @dicko7059 Год назад +2

    Another brilliant, with a raw honest straight-up outline Justin, your very positive helpful manner makes it even more fascinating.

    • @WhiteCollarAdviceOfficial
      @WhiteCollarAdviceOfficial  Год назад +1

      I am striving to provide value! Thank you for the awesome comment. I have another live coming soon. They are fun--just one take and get it out there!

  • @sl5714
    @sl5714 Год назад +1

    Why do I get the feeling that a good part of your audience are people facing trial, indictment, etc.

  • @ask_why000
    @ask_why000 7 месяцев назад

    Crime is crime - regardless of the color of the collar.

  • @tod3msn
    @tod3msn Год назад

    I had taken somewhat of an interest in this case since I had worked in the area of financial aid for higher education so I read what I could to understand what had happened. What mystified me was that the level of free resources in this area that can be found in high school counselors, college financial aid offices, various community agencies and some government agencies and, of course, resources on the internet like software programs that one could use on their own. So, I was unclear why an individual would want this service and also why a business buying the business did not call college or university financial aid offices or business office to ask their thoughts. Bare minimum research would be all that was needed to get a grasp on whether or not this was a good move. I'm not trying to second guess any business buying this service but it is obvious to me a little looking under the hood of the concept would give one a good perspective on whether buying the Javice business was the right move.

  • @stevedemarest276
    @stevedemarest276 Год назад +1

    I wonder how many people Jamie Dimon failed for doing crappy diligence on this deal. I bet it was quite a few.

  • @jamiekavanagh7987
    @jamiekavanagh7987 Год назад

    So funny how people do froudulent crimes and think no one will know no one will see 🙈

  • @billyjean9484
    @billyjean9484 Год назад

    Chase spends 200M with no 3rd party due diligence?

  • @danlizotte-y5n
    @danlizotte-y5n Год назад +1

    DON'T TRUST LAWYERS

  • @domamadi5631
    @domamadi5631 Год назад

    was the hacker you talked about Nicholas Truglia ?

  • @JR-sq2of
    @JR-sq2of Год назад +1

    OMG. You had to talk to Dr's while walking around a track? 😂. That's not prison. And ignorance of the law isn't an excuse. Give us a break 😭😭 What nerve you've got. Someone needs a wake up call. 😮

    • @KatsDad
      @KatsDad Год назад +2

      I never went to prison, but I visited people in prison. Sitting down in the cafeteria, most of the people I saw had families, and they didn’t look like obvious crooks. They just made a mistake. And when they got out, they were good people with good families.

  • @gregoryambres1897
    @gregoryambres1897 Год назад

    5:44 Yes.