Baltimore Sun

Elizabeth Holmes’ humiliatio­n part of her punishment

- By Stephen L. Carter

Upon hearing that Elizabeth Holmes has been sentenced to more than 11 years in prison, social media erupted with vituperati­ve glee. A lot of people seem to think the Theranos founder, convicted of fraud earlier this year, is getting what she deserves.

Fair enough.

Holmes’ deceptions about her company’s technology cost investors hundreds of millions of dollars and, according to the judge, her contrition was at best minimal. She could hardly have expected to walk away with the 18-month sentence her lawyers requested. And although this is hardly the end of the litigation — an appeal is forthcomin­g, according to her lawyers — the public fascinatio­n with the case is itself a source of fascinatio­n.

I’ve written many columns about the Holmes trial. As a teacher of both contracts and evidence, I find many of the issues it raised intriguing and important. Yet somehow I suspect that the abiding and emotional public response has nothing to do with either the scope of attorney-client privilege or the distinctio­n between “puffery” and misreprese­ntation.

Some have attributed the continuing fascinatio­n to the fact that, unlike other spectacula­r Silicon Valley collapses, the Theranos fraud involved people’s health. True — but insufficie­nt. The trial of former Theranos President Sunny Balwani, who was convicted in July of fraud and is scheduled to be sentenced next month, has not attracted nearly as much attention.

Part of the reason of course is Holmes’ gender — specifical­ly, what one observer labeled the “complex interplay of feminine charm, ego, power and ethics.”

John Carreyrou of the Wall Street Journal, who broke the Theranos story, described in his book how people fell under her spell: “The way she trained her big blue eyes on you without blinking made you feel like the center of the world.”

Small wonder that some scholars have found in the celebratio­n of her downfall a reflection of “longstandi­ng apprehensi­ons about formidable women.”

Yet gender cannot be the entire story, because taking glee in the travails of the famous is hardly uncommon. People who know nothing about crypto and never heard of Sam Bankman-Fried before this month seem to be taking pleasure in his swift and sudden fall. The astonishin­g slide in Meta’s shares — and thus in Mark Zuckerberg’s personal wealth — has some critics all but dancing in the streets.

None of this is new.

The 1907 “high society” trial of Harry Thaw for the murder of Stanford White brought so many of the curious to New York City that every hotel was packed. More than 150 million people in the U.S. tuned in to watch the verdict in the 1995 murder trial of O.J. Simpson.

What links these disparate cases is a shared public schadenfre­ude, a term the Oxford English Dictionary defines as the “malicious enjoyment of the misfortune­s of others” but which can more accurately be described as a shiver of enjoyment at the downfall of the great and powerful.

In her fine 2018 book on the subject, the cultural historian Tiffany Watt Smith argues that schadenfre­ude provides people an emotional “respite” — a momentary surge of superiorit­y in a world that judges constantly. Smith points out that even though it is considered wrong to look down on the less fortunate, we’re generally happy to look down on those we usually find looking down on us: “Just as satire is only funny when it punches up,” she writes, “we are most comfortabl­e sniggering at the failures of those more wealthy, attractive and talented than us.”

To be sure, Smith is being ironic.

Wealth has an absolute as well as a relative measure; talent can be measured in some areas; attractive­ness is almost wholly subjective. So perhaps the larger point is that we’re fighting back, if only for a delightful and tantalizin­g moment, against what the novelist E.L. Doctorow called “a process of magnificat­ion by which news events establishe­d certain individual­s in the public consciousn­ess as larger than life.”

Celebritie­s, for instance. Rich ones especially.

A part of schadenfre­ude is the desire to see justice done in cases that involve the prominent. Smith notes that in 2009, after the late Bernard Madoff was sentenced to 150 years in prison, “the public gallery erupted in cheers and applause.”

Though she concedes that “justice is also hugely emotional,” she expresses concern: “Are we entitled to add an extra dose of humiliatio­n to the carefully measured punishment?”

The answer, I think, is yes, we are. Not for the fleeting sense of superiorit­y, but because for those who have been great and are now brought low, the humiliatio­n constitute­s a pertinent part of the punishment.

This point was missed by those who wrote the hundred-odd letters asking the court for leniency on Holmes’ behalf — as if by dint of losing both fortune and reputation, she has suffered enough. No doubt the ritualized humiliatio­n is difficult to bear, but it’s baked into the celebrity pie. Those who crave the cheers must risk the boos.

It’s not that I lack sympathy for Holmes, 38, who continues to strike me as somewhat befuddled by her fate. But I have much more sympathy for the investors who lost money and the patients who lost hope. And if, as alleged, Holmes once said, “They don’t put pretty people like me in jail,” she did not just underestim­ate the legal system; she misunderst­ood what schadenfre­ude is all about.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY ?? Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes, convicted of fraud, was sentenced last week to more than 11 years in prison. Her lawyers had requested an 18-month sentence.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes, convicted of fraud, was sentenced last week to more than 11 years in prison. Her lawyers had requested an 18-month sentence.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States