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'''Joanna Smith-Griffin''' is an American entrepreneur and | '''Joanna Smith-Griffin''' is an American entrepreneur who founded and served as CEO of AllHere Education, an artificial intelligence education technology startup. In November 2024, she was arrested and charged with [[Securities Fraud|securities fraud]], [[Wire Fraud|wire fraud]], and aggravated identity theft for allegedly defrauding investors out of nearly $10 million.<ref name="doj">U.S. Department of Justice, "CEO of Artificial Intelligence Startup Company Charged With Defrauding Investors," November 19, 2024, https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/ceo-artificial-intelligence-startup-company-charged-defrauding-investors</ref> She made the [[Special_Topics/Forbes_30_Under_30_to_Prison_Pipeline|Forbes 30 Under 30]] list for Education in 2021, a recognition that helped build her credibility. If convicted on all counts, she faces up to 42 years in federal prison.<ref name="techcrunch">TechCrunch, "Federal prosecutors have charged another Forbes 30 Under 30 alum with fraud," November 20, 2024</ref> | ||
== Summary == | == Summary == | ||
Smith-Griffin founded AllHere Education in 2016 while attending Harvard University's Extension School. Her company developed an AI-powered chatbot intended to reduce student absenteeism by improving how families engaged with schools. AllHere won contracts with major school districts across the country, including a $6 million deal with the Los Angeles Unified School District.<ref name="the74">The 74 Million, "Feds Charge Once-Lauded AllHere AI Founder in $10M Scheme to Defraud Investors," November 2024</ref> | |||
Federal prosecutors say that from November 2020 to June 2024, Smith-Griffin ran a scheme to defraud investors by badly misrepresenting AllHere's finances and customer base. She told investors the company had generated $3.7 million in revenue in 2020 when it actually made around $11,000. She also claimed the company had $2.5 million in cash when the real amount was roughly $494,000.<ref name="doj" /> The gap between reported and actual revenue exceeded 99 percent, according to court documents from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York. | |||
Smith-Griffin was arrested at her | Smith-Griffin was arrested at her Raleigh, North Carolina home on November 19, 2024. AllHere is now in Chapter 7 bankruptcy, employees have been laid off, and a court-appointed trustee controls operations.<ref name="doj" /> | ||
== Background == | == Background == | ||
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=== Early Life and Education === | === Early Life and Education === | ||
Smith-Griffin earned her bachelor's degree from Harvard Extension School in 2016. Before starting AllHere, she worked as a charter school teacher and family engagement director in Boston. That experience gave her insight into the real struggles schools faced communicating with families about attendance and engagement.<ref name="the74" /> She'd seen firsthand how chronic absenteeism affects millions of students nationwide, damaging academic achievement and driving up dropout rates. | |||
=== AllHere Education === | === AllHere Education === | ||
Smith-Griffin founded AllHere Education | In 2016, Smith-Griffin founded AllHere Education through Harvard Innovation Labs, a university startup incubator backing student and alumni entrepreneurs. Her core product was an AI chatbot designed to boost student attendance by improving communication between schools and families through text, phone, and other digital channels. The technology targeted chronic absenteeism, a persistent challenge for school districts, particularly in underserved communities where language barriers and limited access to school resources often block family engagement. | ||
AllHere | AllHere's platform sent personalized messages to parents and guardians with attendance reminders, homework updates, and event information. The system worked across multiple languages and was meant to integrate with existing school information systems. The company marketed itself as tackling an important equity issue: chronic absenteeism affects students from low-income families and students of color at higher rates. | ||
Several major school districts signed up. Los Angeles Unified School District, the second-largest in the nation, gave AllHere a $6 million contract for its AI chatbot services.<ref name="latimes">Los Angeles Times, "L.A. schools' $6-million AI chatbot was a disaster. The district is demanding its money back," March 20, 2024</ref> New York City Department of Education and Atlanta Public Schools became clients too. Those big-name contracts built credibility in the ed-tech market and attracted serious investor interest. | |||
Forbes named Smith-Griffin to its 30 Under 30 list for Education in 2021, a huge boost that helped the company draw more investment.<ref name="techcrunch" /> The recognition positioned her as a rising star in education technology and brought national press attention to AllHere's mission. Inc. magazine added her to its Female Founders 250 list in 2024, shortly before her arrest.<ref name="prnewswire">PR Newswire, "AllHere Founder and CEO Joanna Smith-Griffin Named to Inc.'s 2024 Female Founders 250 List," April 2024</ref> | |||
== Indictment and Criminal Charges == | == Indictment and Criminal Charges == | ||
| Line 108: | Line 39: | ||
=== The Fraud Scheme === | === The Fraud Scheme === | ||
On November 19, 2024, an indictment became public accusing Smith-Griffin of running a multi-year scheme to defraud investors from roughly November 2020 through June 2024. The charging documents, filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, say Smith-Griffin made numerous false claims to attract investment capital the company needed to stay afloat.<ref name="doj" /> | |||
Prosecutors allege | Prosecutors allege she systematically inflated AllHere's financial performance and business prospects to trick potential and existing investors. According to the indictment, she told investors AllHere had generated $3.7 million in revenue in 2020 when actual revenue was about $11,000. A difference of more than 99 percent. She claimed roughly $2.5 million in cash reserves when the company really had around $494,000, overstating liquidity by more than 400 percent. She also falsely claimed AllHere had contracts with major school districts it didn't actually have, inventing business relationships to create an appearance of rapid customer growth. | ||
Through these false statements, Smith-Griffin allegedly got nearly $10 million from investors over four years. She also pursued an additional $35 million from a private equity investor. That investor pulled out after checking the company's financials and spotting inconsistencies between Smith-Griffin's claims and actual financial condition.<ref name="doj" /> | |||
Through these | |||
=== Misuse of Funds === | === Misuse of Funds === | ||
Prosecutors also allege that Smith-Griffin transferred at least $600,000 in company funds to her personal accounts using her control over AllHere's bank accounts. She allegedly used PayPal and Zelle to make repeated wire transfers under $10,000, amounts that might be chosen to avoid automatic reporting requirements on larger transactions. The government says she used the fraudulently obtained money to make a down payment on her North Carolina house and to pay for her 2021 wedding. Neither was a legitimate business expense. Both represented a theft of investor capital.<ref name="doj" /> | |||
=== Cover-Up Attempts === | === Cover-Up Attempts === | ||
When AllHere's investors and outside accountant | When AllHere's investors and outside accountant spotted discrepancies between actual financials and what Smith-Griffin had reported, she allegedly tried to hide the fraud with more deception. According to prosecutors, she set up a fake email account pretending to be AllHere's outside financial consultant. She then used it to send fraudulent financial documents to her biggest investor to cover up the company's true financial state. That alleged use of a false identity to continue the fraud became the basis for the aggravated identity theft charge, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence that must run separately from any fraud sentence.<ref name="doj" /> | ||
=== Criminal Charges === | === Criminal Charges === | ||
Smith-Griffin faces three federal charges | Smith-Griffin faces three federal charges. Securities fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1348 carries a maximum of 20 years imprisonment and covers her alleged deception of investors in securities. Wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1343 also carries a maximum of 20 years and relates to her alleged use of electronic communications to pull off the scheme. Aggravated identity theft under 18 U.S.C. § 1028A carries a mandatory minimum of 2 years that must run consecutively, meaning it gets added to any fraud sentence.<ref name="doj" /> | ||
Convicted on all counts? She'd face a maximum of 42 years in federal prison. But actual sentences in federal cases typically follow the Federal Sentencing Guidelines and consider things like criminal history, victim losses, and whether the defendant accepts responsibility. | |||
=== Arrest and Court Proceedings === | === Arrest and Court Proceedings === | ||
Smith-Griffin | Federal agents arrested Smith-Griffin at her Raleigh home on November 19, 2024. She was ordered to appear in the Southern District of New York for arraignment before a federal magistrate judge.<ref name="doj" /> | ||
U.S. Attorney Damian Williams | U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: "Joanna Smith-Griffin used her company, AllHere Education, Inc., to defraud investors. She falsely represented the company's revenue and its customer base, and used her corporate credit cards for personal expenses. The charges reflect our commitment to rooting out corruption and deceptive practices in all sectors."<ref name="doj" /> FBI Assistant Director in Charge James Smith added that the case shows federal law enforcement will pursue those who distort financial reality for personal gain, regardless of the industry. | ||
== AllHere's Collapse == | == AllHere's Collapse == | ||
AllHere Education filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy after the fraud allegations surfaced. That involves liquidating company assets to pay creditors and permanently ending operations. All employees were laid off. A court-appointed bankruptcy trustee now controls remaining assets and distributes any recovered funds to creditors, including defrauded investors. School districts using AllHere scrambled to find replacements. Los Angeles Unified had invested $6 million in the company's technology.<ref name="the74" /> | |||
LAUSD had rolled out AllHere's chatbot under the name "Ed" (for education) with great fanfare, hoping to boost family communication and attendance rates. But the chatbot ran into serious technical problems: it gave parents inaccurate information and didn't integrate properly with the district's student information systems. Even before Smith-Griffin's arrest, LAUSD had grown unhappy with AllHere's performance and wanted its money back.<ref name="latimes" /> The fraud charges added context to the district's problems with the platform. They also raised questions about whether the company ever actually had the technical skills it promised. | |||
== Forbes 30 Under 30 Connection == | == Forbes 30 Under 30 Connection == | ||
Smith-Griffin's case adds to a | Smith-Griffin's case adds to a pattern of Forbes 30 Under 30 honorees facing federal fraud charges, sometimes called the "Forbes 30 Under 30 to Prison Pipeline." The list honors 600 young entrepreneurs and innovators across industries each year and has drawn scrutiny as several high-profile honorees have been charged with or convicted of fraud recently.<ref name="techcrunch" /> Critics ask whether the selection process adequately checks candidates' claims about their companies' performance. They also wonder if Forbes recognition helps fraudulent entrepreneurs attract more victims. | ||
Other notable Forbes 30 Under 30 honorees charged with federal fraud include [[Elizabeth Holmes]], founder of Theranos, who was convicted and is serving more than 11 years; [[Charlie Javice]], founder of Frank, convicted of fraud and sentenced to seven years in 2024 for lying to JPMorgan Chase about customer numbers;<ref name="charliejavice">Substack, "Charlie Javice Gets Seven Years: Lessons from the Frank Financial Aid Fraud," Boardroom Governance Newsletter, 2024</ref> [[Sam Bankman-Fried]], founder of cryptocurrency exchange FTX, convicted and sentenced to 25 years for stealing billions in customer funds; [[Caroline Ellison]], CEO of Alameda Research, sentenced to 2 years for her role in the FTX scheme; [[Billy McFarland]], founder of Fyre Festival, who served federal prison time for fraud; and [[Martin Shkreli]], pharmaceutical executive, who served federal prison time for securities fraud. | |||
The pattern has sparked discussion in business and journalism circles about detecting fraud in early-stage companies and the risks of making young entrepreneurs celebrities before their claims get thoroughly checked. Forbes has stood by its selection process while admitting that some honorees have later faced criminal charges.<ref name="yahoo">Yahoo Finance, "Fintech CEO and Forbes 30 Under 30 alum has been charged with fraud," November 2024</ref> | |||
== Public Statements == | == Public Statements == | ||
As of December 2024, Smith-Griffin | As of December 2024, Smith-Griffin hasn't made any public statements about the charges. Her lawyers haven't issued public comments about the case or her defense strategy. | ||
== Terminology == | == Terminology == | ||
* '''Securities fraud''': | * '''Securities fraud''': Deceiving investors or manipulating financial markets through false or misleading information about securities or investments. | ||
* '''Wire fraud''': A federal crime involving | * '''Wire fraud''': A federal crime involving electronic communications (phone, email, internet) to defraud someone of money or property. | ||
* '''Aggravated identity theft''': The federal crime of using another person's identity in connection with a felony, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence. | * '''Aggravated identity theft''': The federal crime of using another person's identity in connection with a felony, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence. | ||
* '''Chapter 7 bankruptcy''': A form | * '''Chapter 7 bankruptcy''': A bankruptcy form involving liquidating a company's assets to pay creditors. The company ceases operations. | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
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{{FAQSection/Start}} | {{FAQSection/Start}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What did Joanna Smith-Griffin do?|answer=Joanna Smith-Griffin was charged with securities fraud, wire fraud, and aggravated identity theft for allegedly defrauding | {{FAQ|question=What did Joanna Smith-Griffin do?|answer=Joanna Smith-Griffin was charged with securities fraud, wire fraud, and aggravated identity theft for allegedly defrauding AllHere Education investors. The company she founded faced accusations of misrepresenting revenue ($3.7 million claimed versus $11,000 actual) and fabricating customer contracts with major school districts. She allegedly used investor funds to buy her house and pay for her wedding.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=How much prison time does Joanna Smith-Griffin face?|answer= | {{FAQ|question=How much prison time does Joanna Smith-Griffin face?|answer=Smith-Griffin faces up to 42 years in federal prison if convicted on all counts. Securities fraud carries a maximum of 20 years, wire fraud carries a maximum of 20 years, and aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory minimum of 2 years consecutive. Her case is pending in the Southern District of New York.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What was AllHere Education?|answer=AllHere Education was an AI | {{FAQ|question=What was AllHere Education?|answer=AllHere Education was an AI education technology startup founded by Smith-Griffin in 2016 through Harvard Innovation Labs. The company built a chatbot to cut student absenteeism and signed contracts with major school districts including LAUSD. The company is now in Chapter 7 bankruptcy.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=Was Joanna Smith-Griffin on Forbes 30 Under 30?|answer=Yes, | {{FAQ|question=Was Joanna Smith-Griffin on Forbes 30 Under 30?|answer=Yes, she made the Forbes 30 Under 30 list for Education in 2021. She joins other Forbes 30 Under 30 honorees who faced federal fraud charges, including Elizabeth Holmes, Charlie Javice, Sam Bankman-Fried, and Caroline Ellison.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=When was Joanna Smith-Griffin arrested?|answer=Joanna Smith-Griffin was arrested on November 19, 2024, at her home in Raleigh, North Carolina. The indictment was unsealed | {{FAQ|question=When was Joanna Smith-Griffin arrested?|answer=Joanna Smith-Griffin was arrested on November 19, 2024, at her home in Raleigh, North Carolina. The indictment was unsealed that same day.}} | ||
Latest revision as of 18:07, 23 April 2026
| Joanna Smith-Griffin | |
|---|---|
| Born: | 1991 United States |
| Charges: | Securities fraud, Wire fraud, Aggravated identity theft |
| Sentence: | Pending (faces up to 42 years) |
| Facility: | |
| Status: | Awaiting trial |
Joanna Smith-Griffin is an American entrepreneur who founded and served as CEO of AllHere Education, an artificial intelligence education technology startup. In November 2024, she was arrested and charged with securities fraud, wire fraud, and aggravated identity theft for allegedly defrauding investors out of nearly $10 million.[1] She made the Forbes 30 Under 30 list for Education in 2021, a recognition that helped build her credibility. If convicted on all counts, she faces up to 42 years in federal prison.[2]
Summary
Smith-Griffin founded AllHere Education in 2016 while attending Harvard University's Extension School. Her company developed an AI-powered chatbot intended to reduce student absenteeism by improving how families engaged with schools. AllHere won contracts with major school districts across the country, including a $6 million deal with the Los Angeles Unified School District.[3]
Federal prosecutors say that from November 2020 to June 2024, Smith-Griffin ran a scheme to defraud investors by badly misrepresenting AllHere's finances and customer base. She told investors the company had generated $3.7 million in revenue in 2020 when it actually made around $11,000. She also claimed the company had $2.5 million in cash when the real amount was roughly $494,000.[1] The gap between reported and actual revenue exceeded 99 percent, according to court documents from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York.
Smith-Griffin was arrested at her Raleigh, North Carolina home on November 19, 2024. AllHere is now in Chapter 7 bankruptcy, employees have been laid off, and a court-appointed trustee controls operations.[1]
Background
Early Life and Education
Smith-Griffin earned her bachelor's degree from Harvard Extension School in 2016. Before starting AllHere, she worked as a charter school teacher and family engagement director in Boston. That experience gave her insight into the real struggles schools faced communicating with families about attendance and engagement.[3] She'd seen firsthand how chronic absenteeism affects millions of students nationwide, damaging academic achievement and driving up dropout rates.
AllHere Education
In 2016, Smith-Griffin founded AllHere Education through Harvard Innovation Labs, a university startup incubator backing student and alumni entrepreneurs. Her core product was an AI chatbot designed to boost student attendance by improving communication between schools and families through text, phone, and other digital channels. The technology targeted chronic absenteeism, a persistent challenge for school districts, particularly in underserved communities where language barriers and limited access to school resources often block family engagement.
AllHere's platform sent personalized messages to parents and guardians with attendance reminders, homework updates, and event information. The system worked across multiple languages and was meant to integrate with existing school information systems. The company marketed itself as tackling an important equity issue: chronic absenteeism affects students from low-income families and students of color at higher rates.
Several major school districts signed up. Los Angeles Unified School District, the second-largest in the nation, gave AllHere a $6 million contract for its AI chatbot services.[4] New York City Department of Education and Atlanta Public Schools became clients too. Those big-name contracts built credibility in the ed-tech market and attracted serious investor interest.
Forbes named Smith-Griffin to its 30 Under 30 list for Education in 2021, a huge boost that helped the company draw more investment.[2] The recognition positioned her as a rising star in education technology and brought national press attention to AllHere's mission. Inc. magazine added her to its Female Founders 250 list in 2024, shortly before her arrest.[5]
Indictment and Criminal Charges
The Fraud Scheme
On November 19, 2024, an indictment became public accusing Smith-Griffin of running a multi-year scheme to defraud investors from roughly November 2020 through June 2024. The charging documents, filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, say Smith-Griffin made numerous false claims to attract investment capital the company needed to stay afloat.[1]
Prosecutors allege she systematically inflated AllHere's financial performance and business prospects to trick potential and existing investors. According to the indictment, she told investors AllHere had generated $3.7 million in revenue in 2020 when actual revenue was about $11,000. A difference of more than 99 percent. She claimed roughly $2.5 million in cash reserves when the company really had around $494,000, overstating liquidity by more than 400 percent. She also falsely claimed AllHere had contracts with major school districts it didn't actually have, inventing business relationships to create an appearance of rapid customer growth.
Through these false statements, Smith-Griffin allegedly got nearly $10 million from investors over four years. She also pursued an additional $35 million from a private equity investor. That investor pulled out after checking the company's financials and spotting inconsistencies between Smith-Griffin's claims and actual financial condition.[1]
Misuse of Funds
Prosecutors also allege that Smith-Griffin transferred at least $600,000 in company funds to her personal accounts using her control over AllHere's bank accounts. She allegedly used PayPal and Zelle to make repeated wire transfers under $10,000, amounts that might be chosen to avoid automatic reporting requirements on larger transactions. The government says she used the fraudulently obtained money to make a down payment on her North Carolina house and to pay for her 2021 wedding. Neither was a legitimate business expense. Both represented a theft of investor capital.[1]
Cover-Up Attempts
When AllHere's investors and outside accountant spotted discrepancies between actual financials and what Smith-Griffin had reported, she allegedly tried to hide the fraud with more deception. According to prosecutors, she set up a fake email account pretending to be AllHere's outside financial consultant. She then used it to send fraudulent financial documents to her biggest investor to cover up the company's true financial state. That alleged use of a false identity to continue the fraud became the basis for the aggravated identity theft charge, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence that must run separately from any fraud sentence.[1]
Criminal Charges
Smith-Griffin faces three federal charges. Securities fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1348 carries a maximum of 20 years imprisonment and covers her alleged deception of investors in securities. Wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1343 also carries a maximum of 20 years and relates to her alleged use of electronic communications to pull off the scheme. Aggravated identity theft under 18 U.S.C. § 1028A carries a mandatory minimum of 2 years that must run consecutively, meaning it gets added to any fraud sentence.[1]
Convicted on all counts? She'd face a maximum of 42 years in federal prison. But actual sentences in federal cases typically follow the Federal Sentencing Guidelines and consider things like criminal history, victim losses, and whether the defendant accepts responsibility.
Arrest and Court Proceedings
Federal agents arrested Smith-Griffin at her Raleigh home on November 19, 2024. She was ordered to appear in the Southern District of New York for arraignment before a federal magistrate judge.[1]
U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: "Joanna Smith-Griffin used her company, AllHere Education, Inc., to defraud investors. She falsely represented the company's revenue and its customer base, and used her corporate credit cards for personal expenses. The charges reflect our commitment to rooting out corruption and deceptive practices in all sectors."[1] FBI Assistant Director in Charge James Smith added that the case shows federal law enforcement will pursue those who distort financial reality for personal gain, regardless of the industry.
AllHere's Collapse
AllHere Education filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy after the fraud allegations surfaced. That involves liquidating company assets to pay creditors and permanently ending operations. All employees were laid off. A court-appointed bankruptcy trustee now controls remaining assets and distributes any recovered funds to creditors, including defrauded investors. School districts using AllHere scrambled to find replacements. Los Angeles Unified had invested $6 million in the company's technology.[3]
LAUSD had rolled out AllHere's chatbot under the name "Ed" (for education) with great fanfare, hoping to boost family communication and attendance rates. But the chatbot ran into serious technical problems: it gave parents inaccurate information and didn't integrate properly with the district's student information systems. Even before Smith-Griffin's arrest, LAUSD had grown unhappy with AllHere's performance and wanted its money back.[4] The fraud charges added context to the district's problems with the platform. They also raised questions about whether the company ever actually had the technical skills it promised.
Forbes 30 Under 30 Connection
Smith-Griffin's case adds to a pattern of Forbes 30 Under 30 honorees facing federal fraud charges, sometimes called the "Forbes 30 Under 30 to Prison Pipeline." The list honors 600 young entrepreneurs and innovators across industries each year and has drawn scrutiny as several high-profile honorees have been charged with or convicted of fraud recently.[2] Critics ask whether the selection process adequately checks candidates' claims about their companies' performance. They also wonder if Forbes recognition helps fraudulent entrepreneurs attract more victims.
Other notable Forbes 30 Under 30 honorees charged with federal fraud include Elizabeth Holmes, founder of Theranos, who was convicted and is serving more than 11 years; Charlie Javice, founder of Frank, convicted of fraud and sentenced to seven years in 2024 for lying to JPMorgan Chase about customer numbers;[6] Sam Bankman-Fried, founder of cryptocurrency exchange FTX, convicted and sentenced to 25 years for stealing billions in customer funds; Caroline Ellison, CEO of Alameda Research, sentenced to 2 years for her role in the FTX scheme; Billy McFarland, founder of Fyre Festival, who served federal prison time for fraud; and Martin Shkreli, pharmaceutical executive, who served federal prison time for securities fraud.
The pattern has sparked discussion in business and journalism circles about detecting fraud in early-stage companies and the risks of making young entrepreneurs celebrities before their claims get thoroughly checked. Forbes has stood by its selection process while admitting that some honorees have later faced criminal charges.[7]
Public Statements
As of December 2024, Smith-Griffin hasn't made any public statements about the charges. Her lawyers haven't issued public comments about the case or her defense strategy.
Terminology
- Securities fraud: Deceiving investors or manipulating financial markets through false or misleading information about securities or investments.
- Wire fraud: A federal crime involving electronic communications (phone, email, internet) to defraud someone of money or property.
- Aggravated identity theft: The federal crime of using another person's identity in connection with a felony, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence.
- Chapter 7 bankruptcy: A bankruptcy form involving liquidating a company's assets to pay creditors. The company ceases operations.
See also
- Wire Fraud
- Securities Fraud
- Forbes 30 Under 30 to Prison Pipeline
- Elizabeth Holmes
- Charlie Javice
- Sam Bankman-Fried
- Caroline Ellison
- Federal Sentencing Guidelines and Offense Enhancements
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What did Joanna Smith-Griffin do?
Joanna Smith-Griffin was charged with securities fraud, wire fraud, and aggravated identity theft for allegedly defrauding AllHere Education investors. The company she founded faced accusations of misrepresenting revenue ($3.7 million claimed versus $11,000 actual) and fabricating customer contracts with major school districts. She allegedly used investor funds to buy her house and pay for her wedding.
Q: How much prison time does Joanna Smith-Griffin face?
Smith-Griffin faces up to 42 years in federal prison if convicted on all counts. Securities fraud carries a maximum of 20 years, wire fraud carries a maximum of 20 years, and aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory minimum of 2 years consecutive. Her case is pending in the Southern District of New York.
Q: What was AllHere Education?
AllHere Education was an AI education technology startup founded by Smith-Griffin in 2016 through Harvard Innovation Labs. The company built a chatbot to cut student absenteeism and signed contracts with major school districts including LAUSD. The company is now in Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Q: Was Joanna Smith-Griffin on Forbes 30 Under 30?
Yes, she made the Forbes 30 Under 30 list for Education in 2021. She joins other Forbes 30 Under 30 honorees who faced federal fraud charges, including Elizabeth Holmes, Charlie Javice, Sam Bankman-Fried, and Caroline Ellison.
Q: When was Joanna Smith-Griffin arrested?
Joanna Smith-Griffin was arrested on November 19, 2024, at her home in Raleigh, North Carolina. The indictment was unsealed that same day.
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 U.S. Department of Justice, "CEO of Artificial Intelligence Startup Company Charged With Defrauding Investors," November 19, 2024, https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/ceo-artificial-intelligence-startup-company-charged-defrauding-investors
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 TechCrunch, "Federal prosecutors have charged another Forbes 30 Under 30 alum with fraud," November 20, 2024
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 The 74 Million, "Feds Charge Once-Lauded AllHere AI Founder in $10M Scheme to Defraud Investors," November 2024
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Los Angeles Times, "L.A. schools' $6-million AI chatbot was a disaster. The district is demanding its money back," March 20, 2024
- ↑ PR Newswire, "AllHere Founder and CEO Joanna Smith-Griffin Named to Inc.'s 2024 Female Founders 250 List," April 2024
- ↑ Substack, "Charlie Javice Gets Seven Years: Lessons from the Frank Financial Aid Fraud," Boardroom Governance Newsletter, 2024
- ↑ Yahoo Finance, "Fintech CEO and Forbes 30 Under 30 alum has been charged with fraud," November 2024