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Disgraced Theranos boss begins 11-year sentence for blood-testing scam

Elizabeth Holmes, 39, entered a federal women’s prison camp in Bryan, Texas on Tuesday.

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Disgraced Theranos chief executive Elizabeth Holmes is in custody at a Texas prison where she could spend the next 11 years for overseeing a blood-testing hoax, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Holmes, 39, on Tuesday entered a federal women’s prison camp in Bryan, Texas — where the federal judge who sentenced Holmes in November recommended she be incarcerated.

The minimum-security facility is about 95 miles northwest of Houston, where Holmes grew up.

As she begins her sentence, Holmes is leaving behind two young children — a son born in July 2021 a few weeks before the start of her trial and a three-month old daughter who was conceived after a jury convicted her on four felony counts of fraud and conspiracy in January 2022.

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Elizabeth Holmes, centre, is escorted by prison officials into a federal women’s prison camp in Bryan, Texas (Michael Wyke/AP/PA)

While she was building up Theranos, Holmes grew closer to Ramesh, “Sunny” Balwani, who would become her romantic partner as well as an investor and fellow executive in the Palo Alto, California, company.

Together, Holmes and Balwani promised Theranos would revolutionise health care with a technology that could quickly scan for diseases and other problems with a few drops of blood taken with a finger prick.

The hype surrounding that purported breakthrough helped Theranos raise nearly one billion dollars (£0.8 billion) from investors, assemble an influential board of directors that include former presidential cabinet members George Shultz, Henry Kissinger and James Mattis and turned Holmes into a Silicon Valley sensation with a fortune valued at 4.5 billion dollars (£3.6 billion) on paper in 2014.

But serious dangerous flaws in Theranos’s technology were exposed in a series of articles in The Wall Street Journal that Holmes and Balwani tried to thwart.

Holmes and Balwani, who had been secretly living together while running Theranos, broke up after the Journal’s revelations and the company collapsed.

In 2018, the US Justice Department charged both with a litany of white-collar crimes in a case aimed at putting a stop to the Silicon Valley practice of overselling the capabilities of a still-developing technology — a technique that became known as “fake it ’til you make it”.

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The prison in Texas where Elizabeth Holmes is expected to serve her 11-year sentence for fraud relating to the defunct company Theranos (Michael Wyke/AP/PA)

She told the jury about being sexually and emotionally abused by Balwani while he controlled her in ways that she said clouded her thinking. Balwani’s lawyer denied Holmes’ allegations, which was one of the key reasons they were tried separately.

Balwani, 57, was convicted on 12 felony counts of fraud and conspiracy in a trial that began two months after Holmes’ ended. He is currently serving a nearly 13-year sentence in a Southern California prison.

Maintaining she was treated unfairly during the trial, Holmes sought to remain free while she appeals against her conviction. But that bid was rejected by U.S. District Judge Edward Davila, who presided over her trial, and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

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