New York Post

BLOOD-MONEY TRIAL BEGINS

Theranos founder could get 20 yrs.

- By THEO WAYT Additional reporting by Will Feuer

This could get bloody. Opening statements are set to be delivered Wednesday in the trial of Elizabeth Holmes, the founder of defunct blood-testing company Theranos who prosecutor­s say became the world’s youngest self-made female billionair­e by lying to investors about her company’s technology.

The 37-year-old founder is facing two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and 10 counts of wire fraud — and could be sent to jail for 20 years.

The trial comes after multiple delays due to the coronaviru­s pandemic and Holmes giving birth to a baby boy in July — and after a jury-selection process that last week saw potential jurors quizzed about whether they knew Holmes from the book “Bad Blood” or the HBO documentar­y “The Inventor.”

Meanwhile, as she waits for trial, Holmes has been living with her partner William “Billy” Evans, a hotel heir, at a home on a 74-acre, $135 million estate outside Palo Alto, Calif., CNBC reported Tuesday.

The trial is expected to last for several weeks, with hearings set for Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays.

Attorneys for the founder of Theranos — which was once valued north of $9 billion — have told the Northern California judge overseeing the case that the founder herself is “highly likely” to take the stand and defend herself. She is expected to accuse her ex-boyfriend and former Theranos executive Ramesh “Sonny” Balwani of abuse as part of her defense.

The trial may also see testimony from heavy hitters from the worlds of politics and media who were affiliated with Theranos — including former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, former Secretary of Defense James Mattis and Rupert Murdoch, the owner of New York Post parent company News Corp. — court documents show. The two former US officials were board members of the company; Murdoch was an investor.

Here’s what’s happened so far and what to expect.

What did Elizabeth Holmes and Theranos do?

In 2003, 19-year-old Elizabeth Holmes dropped out of Stanford University to found a blood-testing company. She later named it Theranos — a combinatio­n of the words “therapy” and “diagnosis”

Holmes’ plan was to create a machine called an “Edison” that could quickly run dozens of tests for everything from diabetes to cancer based on a pinprick of blood. The convenienc­e and speed of Edison devices, Holmes told potential investors, would disrupt the multibilli­on-dollar lab testing industry dominated by giants like Quest Diagnostic­s. It would save lives and make fortunes at the same time.

Theranos operated in secret for nearly a decade, building hushed hype among investors who drove its valuation to $1 billion by 2010 before the company even had a Web site.

Politicall­y connected men like Kissinger, Mattis and former US Sens. Sam Nunn and Bill Frist joined Theranos’ board as the company scored partnershi­ps with Walgreens, Safeway and the Cleveland Clinic.

How did Theranos unravel?

Theranos’ spell was broken starting in October 2015 when a series of reports in The Wall Street Journal showed that most tests the company was claiming to have conducted on Edison machines were actually being done on traditiona­l lab equipment.

That day, Holmes went on CNBC’s “Mad Money” with Jim Cramer to rebuff the charges, claiming the paper was out to stifle innovation.

But the Journal’s revelation­s undermined everything Holmes had been claiming for years, and irate investors saw their once-lucrative stakes in the company crumble to zero-dollar valuations.

Theranos gradually bled employees and was officially defunct by 2018. That same year, the Securities and Exchange Commission officially charged Holmes with “massive fraud,” accusing the founder of taking more than $700 million from investors while lying about her company’s technology.

Holmes avoided admitting fault and dodged prison time in a separate settlement with the SEC, but now she is separately facing the dozen fraud charges from federal prosecutor­s in Northern California.

What about Sunny Balwani and abuse allegation­s?

Another key Theranos figure is Balwani, who served as president and chief operating officer of the company while also dating Holmes. The two met when Holmes was 18 and Balwani was 37.

The couple broke up in 2016 as Theranos was unraveling — before Holmes met her now-husband, the hotel heir Evans. Like Holmes, Balwani has also been charged with fraud and is set to go to trial in a separate proceeding in January 2022.

A key aspect of Holmes’ defense will be accusing Balwani of subjecting her to a “decade-long campaign of psychologi­cal abuse,” court documents show.

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