National Post

‘FAILURE IS NOT A CRIME’: THERANOS DEFENCE.

Facing charges of fraud, conspiracy

- Jody Godoy

SAN JOSE • Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes is not a villain but rather a hard-working, young and naive businesswo­man whose company simply failed, her lawyer told jurors on Wednesday at the former Silicon Valley star’s trial on federal fraud charges involving the now-defunct blood-testing startup once valued at US$9 billion.

The prosecutio­n and defence painted remarkably different portraits of Holmes in their opening statements to the 12-member jury in one of the most closely watched trials of a U.S. corporate executive in years. The prosecutio­n then called its first witness, a former company executive.

Robert Leach, a member of the prosecutio­n team, said Holmes had engaged in a scheme of “lying and cheating” to attain wealth and fame at the expense of investors and patients.

Holmes is accused of making false claims about Theranos, including that its devices — designed to draw a drop of blood from a finger prick — could run a range of tests more quickly and accurately than convention­al laboratory means.

“In the end, Theranos failed and Ms. Holmes walked away with nothing,” defence lawyer Lance Wade told jurors in San Jose, California.

“But failure is not a crime. Trying your hardest and coming up short is not a crime. And by the time this trial is over, you will see that the villain the government just presented is actually a living, breathing human being who did her very best each and every day. And she is innocent,” Wade added.

Holmes, 37, has pleaded not guilty to 10 counts of wire fraud and two counts of conspiracy. She may testify during the trial.

“This is a case about fraud — about lying and cheating to get money,” Leach told jurors.

“The scheme brought her fame, it brought her honour and it brought her adoration,” Leach added, also making her a billionair­e.

“She had become, as she sought, one of the most celebrated CEOS in Silicon Valley and the world. But under the facade of Theranos’ success there were significan­t problems brewing,” Leach said.

The defence disagreed. Wade told jurors: “Elizabeth Holmes did not go to work every day intending to lie, cheat and steal. The government would have you believe her company, her entire life, is a fraud. That is wrong.”

On paper, Theranos was worth billions of dollars, but when Holmes left it in 2018, her savings, stock and company were “all gone,” Wade said.

Wade asked jurors to ponder whether Theranos failed because its technology was a fraud or “because a young CEO and her company confronted and could not overcome business obstacles that others saw but she naively underestim­ated.”

Wade said Holmes dropped out of prestigiou­s Stanford University at age 19 and bet her savings to start Theranos in 2003, then poured her life into it for 15 years. Holmes grabbed headlines with her vision of a small machine that could run blood tests in stores and homes.

“She was all in on Theranos, motivated by its mission, not money, committed to that mission until that very last day,” Wade said.

Former Theranos executive Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani, scheduled to be tried separately, also has pleaded not guilty. Court filings showed that Holmes, who had a romantic relationsh­ip with Balwani, has alleged he abused her emotionall­y and psychologi­cally — allegation­s he denies.

One of her mistakes, Wade told jurors, was “trusting and relying on Mr. Balwani as her primary adviser.”

Sitting at a table flanked by her attorneys, Holmes wore a white blouse, greyish-blue skirt suit and a facemask amid the COVID-19 pandemic. U.S. District Judge Edward Davila is presiding.

Prosecutor­s have said Holmes and Balwani defrauded investors between 2010 and 2015 and deceived patients when Theranos began making its tests commercial­ly available, including a partnershi­p with the Walgreens drugstore chain.

Leach said Holmes agreed with Balwani to carry out the scheme. In 2009, after losing interest from Pfizer Inc. and other pharmaceut­ical companies, Holmes turned to fraud, Leach said.

“Out of time and out of money, Elizabeth Holmes decided to lie,” Leach said.

Leach showed jurors excerpts of a Theranos investor presentati­on claiming its process provided the “highest levels of accuracy and precision.” Leach said insiders knew the technology was “plagued by issues and repeatedly failing quality control.”

Leach outlined ways in which Holmes allegedly defrauded investors, including by suggesting that the miniature Theranos lab had been vetted by Pfizer, that its technology was being used by the U.S. military, and that it would achieve more than US$140 million in revenue by the end of 2014, which the prosecutor said it was “nowhere near achieving.”

The Wall Street Journal in 2015 reported that the Theranos devices were flawed and inaccurate, setting off a downward spiral for a company that had drawn investors including media mogul Rupert Murdoch and Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison.

TRYING YOUR HARDEST AND COMING UP SHORT IS NOT A CRIME.

— TIFF artistic co-head director and cameron Bailey

 ?? NICK OTTO / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Elizabeth Holmes, second from left, the founder and former CEO of blood testing and life sciences company
Theranos, arrives Wednesday for the first day of her fraud trial, outside federal court in San Jose, Calif.
NICK OTTO / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Elizabeth Holmes, second from left, the founder and former CEO of blood testing and life sciences company Theranos, arrives Wednesday for the first day of her fraud trial, outside federal court in San Jose, Calif.
 ?? NICK OTTO / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Elizabeth Holmes, the founder and former CEO of blood testing and life sciences firm
Theranos, arrives for the first day of her fraud trial in San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday.
NICK OTTO / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Elizabeth Holmes, the founder and former CEO of blood testing and life sciences firm Theranos, arrives for the first day of her fraud trial in San Jose, Calif., on Wednesday.

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