Thirty-eight-year-old Elizabeth Holmes, who was once described by Forbes as one of the richest Selfmade billionaires in America, has been sentenced to 11 years and three months in prison for fraud. Despite being currently pregnant with her second child.
A federal
judge on Friday November 18, jailed the Theranos founder for defrauding
investors in her now-defunct blood-testing start-up that was once valued at $9
billion.
The
founder of health technology company, Theranos, was at a point worth
$4.5billion and hailed as a genius on the verge of changing the health sector.
She has since been exposed as a fraudster who
deceived Silicon Valley investors, including media mogul, Rupert Murdock, into
funding her start up with false promises. Her company gained worldwide
recognition in 2013 after she claimed she had invented a revolutionary blood
testing kit that only required small amounts of blood and performed accurate
results in as little as 20 minutes.
Turns out
it was all lies and her company was a hoax used to swindle investors, according
to prosecutors in her trial. She was reported to the FBI by some investors
after she failed to show what their money had been used for.
After a
thorough investigation, she was arrested for fraud. Her attorneys had wanted
her to get only 18 months in prison but prosecution said her arrogance and lack
of acknowledgement of wrongdoing through out the trial deserved 15 years in
prison.
The judge
agreed and sentenced her to 11 years in prison and she was also asked to return
$121million to investors.
Before
handing down the sentence, Davila called the case "troubling on so many
levels," questioning what motivated Holmes, a "brilliant"
entrepreneur, to misrepresent her company to investors.
"This
is a fraud case where an exciting venture went forward with great expectations
only to be dashed by untruths, misrepresentations, plain hubris and lies,"
the judge said.
Holmes,
dressed in a dark blouse and black skirt, hugged her parents and her partner
after the sentence was handed down.
Prosecutors
said during the trial that Holmes misrepresented Theranos' technology and
finances, including by claiming that its miniaturized blood testing machine was
able to run an array of tests from a few drops of blood. The company secretly
relied on conventional machines from other companies to run patients' tests,
prosecutors said.
Holmes
testified in her own defense, saying she believed her statements were accurate
at the time.
She was
convicted on four counts but acquitted on four other counts alleging she
defrauded patients who paid for Theranos tests.
Theranos
Inc promised to revolutionize how patients receive diagnoses by replacing
traditional labs with small machines envisioned for use in homes, drugstores
and even on the battlefield.
Forbes
dubbed Holmes the world's youngest female self-made billionaire in 2014, when
she was 30 and her stake in Theranos was worth $4.5 billion. Theranos collapsed
after a series of Wall Street Journal articles in 2015 questioned its
technology.
Actress Amanda Seyfried in September won an Emmy Award for portraying Holmes in the limited series "The Dropout."
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