Bangkok Post

Ex-Silicon Valley star gets 11 yrs

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>>NEW YORK: Fallen US biotech star Elizabeth Holmes was sentenced Friday to just over 11 years in prison for defrauding investors with her Silicon Valley start-up firm.

The Theranos founder had been convicted on four felony fraud counts in January for persuading investors that she had developed a revolution­ary medical device before the company flamed out after an investigat­ion by The Wall Street Journal.

The closely watched case became an indictment of Silicon Valley, and US federal prosecutor­s had sought a 15-year jail term for Holmes. She was sentenced to 135 months.

US attorney Stephanie Hinds said the sentence “reflects the audacity of her massive fraud and the staggering damage she caused”.

“For almost a decade, Elizabeth Holmes fabricated and spread elaborate falsehoods to draw in a legion of capital investors, both big and small, and her deceit caused the loss of hundreds of millions of dollars,” the prosecutor said in a statement following the judge’s decision.

Holmes, who is pregnant, will not have to surrender herself until April next year, ordered US District Judge Edward Davila in a courtroom in San Jose, California.

Holmes’s lawyer indicated she will appeal her conviction.

Moments before her sentencing, a tearful Holmes told the court: “I stand before you taking responsibi­lity for Theranos. I loved Theranos. It was my life’s work.”

She added: “I am devastated by my failings. Every day for the past years I have felt deep pain for what people went through because I failed them.

“I gave everything I had to building our company and trying to save our company.”

Holmes became a star of Silicon Valley when she said her now defunct start-up was perfecting an easy-to-use test kit that could carry out a wide range of medical diagnostic­s with just a few drops of blood.

At the time, Holmes often dressed soberly in black turtleneck­s that evoked her hero, the late Apple icon Steve Jobs.

She sold investors on the idea that her invention would disrupt medical practice, replacing expensive lab tests with her cheap kits.

But prosecutor­s said Holmes knew her device was not producing accurate and reliable results, yet induced dozens of investors to contribute nearly one billion dollars, all without ever achieving meaningful revenue.

Holmes’s meteoric rise and fast demise has been the subject of books, movies and a TV series that framed her story as a cautionary tale on the excesses of the tech industry that blindly followed a charismati­c founder.

At one point, the Theranos board included former US defence secretary James Mattis and former US secretarie­s of state Henry Kissinger and the late George Shultz.

Sentencing Holmes on Friday, Judge Davila said the case was a “tragedy” and “troubling on so many levels”.

He described Holmes as “a big thinker” who had fought to get into an industry dominated by “male ego”.

But he noted “significan­t evidence about manipulati­on and untruths that were being used in the negotiatio­n of the business”.

“What is it that caused that? Was it hubris? Was it intoxicati­on with the fame that comes from being a young entreprene­ur?” he asked.

After hearing her prison sentence, Holmes hugged her partner Billy Evans, who is the father of her 15-month-old son, and her mother, Noel Holmes. Lawyers for Homes, 38, asked for leniency.

 ?? ?? FALL FROM GRACE: Former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes and her partner Billy Evans, in San Jose, California on Friday.
FALL FROM GRACE: Former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes and her partner Billy Evans, in San Jose, California on Friday.

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