Elizabeth Holmes: The rise and fall of the Theranos founder | Crime News

Publish date: 2024-07-30

Holmes’s claims for her blood-testing business turned her into a Silicon Valley darling, but some began to ask questions.

A jury in the United States has found Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes guilty of conspiring to defraud investors in the blood-testing startup, convicting her on four of 11 counts.

Holmes, 37, was accused of defrauding investors and patients with her claims of revolutionising lab testing with a machine that used a single drop of blood. She pleaded not guilty.

Here is a timeline of the key events that led to Monday’s verdict.

2003

Holmes, then just 19 years old, drops out of Stanford University to set up Real-Time Cures, the company that will eventually become Theranos. She dreams of revolutionising diagnostic testing.

2004

The new company raises more than $6m in funding, reaching a valuation of $30m.

2009

Holmes’s then-partner Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani joins Theranos as chief operating officer.

2010

Theranos raises a further $45m in funding, reaching a valuation of $1bn.

2011

Theranos begins attracting high-profile board members, including two former US secretaries of state, George Shultz and Henry Kissinger.

2012

The company moves to the former Facebook headquarters in Palo Alto, California.

2013

Theranos begins promoting its technology, claiming to be able to run a wide range of tests on a single drop of blood using a machine called the Edison, and enters into a partnership with pharmacy group Walgreens Boots Alliance.

2014

Having raised more than $400m, Theranos is valued at more than $9bn. Holmes is recognised by Forbes as a billionaire – a reflection of her stake in the company.

February 2015

An article in the Journal of the American Medical Association criticises Theranos for failing to publish any of its research in peer-reviewed journals.

July 2015

Theranos wins US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for a test to detect the herpes simplex 1 virus.

October 2015

The Wall Street Journal reports that Theranos uses its technology for just a small number of its tests and that employees doubt their accuracy.

The FDA subsequently releases a finding that the company used unapproved devices for tests.

January 2016

The US Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) releases a report that one of the company’s facilities presents “jeopardy to patient health and safety”.

The agency said an inspection revealed that the facility did not meet its own quality-control standards, including not properly calibrating equipment.

June 2016

Walgreens ends its relationship with Theranos.

October 2016

Partner Fund Management, which invested nearly $100m in Theranos, sues the company for securities fraud, claiming it lied about its technology to secure the investment. The case is later settled.

April 2017

Theranos reaches a deal with CMS barring it from the blood-testing business for two years.

March 2018

The US Securities and Exchange Commission charges Theranos, Holmes and Balwani with securities fraud. Holmes is stripped of her stake in and control of the company.

June 2018

Holmes and Balwani are indicted on criminal fraud charges. Both plead not guilty.

September 2018

Theranos announces that it will dissolve.

March 2021

Holmes reveals she is pregnant.

August 2021

Holmes gives birth to her child. A court filing reveals that Holmes plans to argue she was under the control of Balwani, who she says was abusive, at the time of the charged crimes. Balwani denies the allegations in court filings.

September 2021

Trial begins in San Jose, California.

November 2021

Holmes takes the stand to testify in her defence. She denies seeking to mislead investors and patients. She says Balwani was in charge of financial models provided to investors and that he was abusive in their relationship.

December 2021

Jurors hear closing arguments from both sides.

January 3, 2022

Holmes is convicted on charges of defrauding three other investors, as well as conspiring to do so. She is acquitted on three counts of defrauding patients who paid for tests from Theranos and a related conspiracy charge.

The jury could not reach a decision on three counts related to individual investors. A sentencing date is not immediately set. She faces up to 80 years in prison when sentenced by US District Judge Edward Davila but will probably get a less severe sentence.

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