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Federal Prosecutors Seek $878 Million Restitution from Former Theranos Founder/CEO Elizabeth Holmes

New lawsuit contends that the promissory notes Holmes allegedly issued on behalf of defunct clinical laboratory company Theranos are now overdue

Just weeks before Elizabeth Holmes is scheduled to begin her prison term for conviction in the federal investor fraud case related to now-defunct clinical laboratory company Theranos, the long-running legal saga of the former company founder/CEO continues to bring new twists.

This time, news emerged via a lawsuit that Holmes allegedly owes $25 million to Theranos creditors. CNBC obtained a copy of the suit and detailed its contents in a March 17 case update.

Theranos ABC, a company set up on behalf of the creditors, alleged in the lawsuit that “Holmes has not made any payments on account of any of the promissory notes,” CNBC reported. The suit was filed in Superior Court of California Count of Santa Clara.

Elizabeth Holmes and Billy Evans

Elizabeth Holmes (above), founder and former CEO of clinical laboratory company Theranos with husband Billy Evans of Evans Hotels. Holmes lives with Evans and the couple’s two children in the area near San Jose, California. Holmes gave birth to her second baby in February, according to People. In January, Holmes was convicted on three counts of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy. In addition to restitution, Holmes has been ordered to spend up to 11 years and three months in prison. (Photo copyright: Axios.)

Holmes Allegedly Issued Three Promissory Notes

The complaint stated that Holmes allegedly executed the following three promissory notes while she was still CEO at Theranos:

  • August 2011 in the amount of $9,159,333.65.
  • December 2011 in the amount of $7,578,575.52.
  • December 2013 in the amount of $9,129,991.10.

A promissory note is a written promise to pay a party a certain sum of money with a specified due date for the repayment of principal and interest.

“Theranos ABC has demanded payment of promissory note one and promissory note two from Holmes, but Holmes has failed to pay any amounts on account of promissory note,” according to the lawsuit, CNBC reported. The first two notes are overdue, and the third note is due in December.

Elizabeth Holmes’ Prison Term Could Be Delayed

News of the lawsuit, which was filed in December 2022, came to light at a court hearing on March 17. During that hearing, Judge Edward Davila heard arguments about whether Holmes should remain free pending her appeal. She is otherwise scheduled to report to prison on April 27 to begin her sentence after being convicted in January 2022 of defrauding Theranos investors.

Dark Daily covered the ruling in “Disgraced Theranos Founder Elizabeth Holmes to Serve 11 Years, Three Months in Prison, Ending the Latest Chapter in the Story of the Failed Clinical Laboratory Company.”

Davila, who oversaw Holmes’ criminal case, is expected to issue a decision about her freedom during the appeal early this month. The judge is also weighing options for Holmes to pay restitution to her victims.

Prosecutors have asked that she pay back $878 million to Theranos’ former investors and other victims, according to court records reviewed by Dark Daily. The government has argued in court papers that Holmes continues to live a wealthy lifestyle despite her claiming she has no meaningful assets since the collapse of Theranos and her trial.

“Defendant has lived on an estate for over a year where, based upon the monthly cash flow statement defendant provided to the US Probation Office, monthly expenses exceed $13,000 per month,” according to court documents filed by prosecutors ahead of the March 17 hearing. “Defendant asserted that her partner pays the monthly bills rather than her but also listed her significant other’s salary as ‘$0.’”

Holmes’ attorneys argued that the government cannot take an “all or nothing” approach to restitution, and that payments should only be made to investors who testified during the trial, the Associated Press reported.

For Victims, Full Restitution Can Be Rare

The federal Department of Justice (DOJ) acknowledges in its overview of restitution that victims often never collect what they are owed by guilty parties.

“The chance of full recovery is very low,” the DOJ notes. “Many defendants will not have sufficient assets to repay their victims. Many defendants owe very large amounts of restitution to a large number of victims. In federal cases, restitution in the hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars is not unusual. While defendants may make partial payments toward the full restitution owed, it is rare that defendants are able to fully pay the entire restitution amount owed.”

Clinical laboratory professionals will note the irony that one of the biggest convicted fraudsters in US history is now largely attempting to avoid punishments associated with her crimes. If Judge Davila agrees to let Holmes remain free pending her appeal, she could stay out of prison for years and perhaps not have to pay restitution for that length of time as well.

The coming weeks will prove to be pivotal in the final outcome of the case. 

—Scott Wallask

Related Information:

Elizabeth Holmes Owes over $25 Million to Theranos, Lawsuit Says

Elizabeth Holmes Returns to Court in Bid to Avoid Prison

Disgraced Theranos Founder Elizabeth Holmes to Serve 11 Years, Three Months in Prison, Ending the Latest Chapter in the Story of the Failed Clinical Laboratory Company

Judge Decides Elizabeth Holmes’ Prison Term

Theranos Founder and Former CEO Elizabeth Holmes’ Federal Criminal Fraud Trial Finally Is Under Way in California

Court documents show Holmes’ defense strategy includes accusing ex-boyfriend and former COO Balwani of ‘intimate partner abuse’ that impacted her ‘state of mind’

It has started! The long-awaited criminal trial of former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes is underway in a federal courthouse in Silicon Valley. Across the profession of medical laboratory medicine, there is keen interest in the story of Holmes and her now-defunct clinical laboratory company Theranos.

This next chapter in the drama began on September 8 with opening arguments. Federal prosecutors came out strong, claiming Holmes was “a manipulative fraudster who duped investors and patients alike and knew the whole time that she was hoodwinking them,” according to NPR.

“This is a case about fraud, about lying, and cheating to get money,” said Assistant US Attorney Robert Leach, NPR reported. “It’s a crime on Main Street, and it’s a crime in Silicon Valley,” he added.

Not surprisingly, Holmes’ defense team had a different take, claiming Holmes was simply “a hardworking, young startup executive who believed in the mission of the company, only to see it buckle in the face of business obstacles,” NPR reported. “They argued that she placed blind faith in the No. 2 executive at the company [Balwani] and overly trusted lab directors, who the defense team says were legally responsible for how the labs were run.”

Holmes Claims Abuse at the Hands of Former Theranos COO Balwani

Many pathologists and clinical laboratory managers are ready to watch and learn what unfolds in the opening stages of Holmes’ long-delayed federal criminal fraud trial. During the jury selection process, recently unsealed court documents showed that Holmes’ defense planned to include claims she was abused by her then boyfriend, Theranos Chief Operating Officer Ramesh Balwani.

This surprising development adds yet another twist to the tale of the disgraced Silicon Valley executive and her defunct clinical laboratory testing company.

The hype surrounding the once-high flying startup, which in 2015 reached a peak valuation of $9 billion, began unraveling that same year when a Wall Street Journal (WSJ) investigation exposed the company’s alleged deceptions and questionable practices related to its finger-prick blood-testing technology.

Fast-forward six years—Theranos is now gone but its top executive continues to make headlines, not as a laboratory science wunderkind, but as a criminal defendant.

Holmes, 37, has pleaded not guilty to all charges. Her former consort and ex-Theranos COO Ramesh Balwani also pleaded not guilty to all charges. He will be tried separately from Holmes.

Elizabeth Holmes and her husband William Evans

Elizabeth Holmes, founder and former CEO of defunct clinical laboratory testing company Theranos, is seen leaving the Robert F. Peckham US Courthouse with husband William Evans following opening arguments in her federal trial on September 8. (Photo copyright: Reuters/Peter DaSilva.)

Dozens of Potential Jurors Removed for Alleged Bias

On August 31, in-person questioning of prospective jurors began in Holmes’ federal fraud trial in San Jose, California. The process did not go well. As CNBC reported, dozens of potential jurors were removed from the jury pool due to potential bias in the case.

“Thirty to forty of the remaining jurors have consumed substantial, and I mean lengthy extrajudicial material, about the case and about the defendant,” defense attorney Kevin Downey, JD of Washington, D.C.-based Williams and Connolly, LLP, told Judge Edward Davila, CNBC reported. “We’re very vulnerable to any of the jurors commenting in some ways as either the court or lawyers conduct voir dire about the content of the media they’ve seen.”

Voir dire is the legal term for preliminary examinations of jurors, which in this initial screening was done by reviewing potential juror questionnaires.

Holmes’ defense attorneys, according to CNBC, previously expressed concerns about “inflammatory” media coverage of the case. However, Assistant US Attorney Jeffrey Schenk maintained, “Less than half of the individuals that filled out the questionnaire had prior exposure to Holmes and Balwani. One juror saying something during the voir dire process that could be overheard is a risk in every court case,” CNBC reported.

Holmes Claims ‘Mental Condition Bearing on Guilt’

A report by the Independent notes that newly unsealed court documents which were first reported by NPR reveal that Holmes will mount a defense that includes claims of “intimate partner abuse” by Balwani, 56, during their past relationship.

 “The documents show that Ms. Holmes will describe how Mr. Balwani controlled what she ate and drank, how she dressed, and who she spoke to, while also alleging he threw ‘sharp’ objects at her,” the Independent reported.

NPR reported that court documents indicate Holmes is likely to take the stand and testify at her trial. She will not be presenting an insanity defense but will put forth a “defense of a mental condition bearing on guilt” that was the result of partner abuse and that impacted her “state of mind” at the time of the alleged crimes.

Court documents filed by Balwani’s defense attorneys label Holmes’ allegations as “salacious and inflammatory.”

“In truth, Ms. Holmes’ allegations are deeply offensive to Mr. Balwani, devastating personally to him and highly and unfairly prejudicial to his defense of this case,” defense attorney Jeffrey Coopersmith, JD, Principle and founder of Coopersmith Law and Strategy, wrote in the filing.

The Theranos Saga Continues …

In “Former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes Is Pregnant, Causing a Further Delay in Her Trial Date,” Dark Daily reported that Holmes’ trial had been delayed multiple times since she was first was indicted on 11 counts of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud in 2018. The COVID-19 pandemic, and more recently Holmes’ pregnancy, delayed the start of her trial until August.

CNBC reported that Holmes gave birth on July 10, 2021, in Redwood, California. The baby’s father is William Evans, heir to the Evans Hotels chain in California, The Sun reported.

Balwani’s criminal fraud trial is scheduled to begin with jury selection on January 11, 2022. Both Holmes and Balwani face maximum penalties of 20 years in jail and a nearly $3 million fine, plus possible restitution if found guilty on all counts.

It is a rare thing for owners of a clinical laboratory company accused of fraud to come to trial and receive so much media attention. In the weeks leading up to the trial, medical laboratory managers and pathologists could read a wide variety of news stories about the impending trial and the legal strategies expected by the attorneys for both the plaintiffs and the defendants.

Thus, everyone interested in this trial and its outcome will likely have the equivalent of a front row seat because so many journalists are covering this trial.

Andrea Downing Peck

Related Information

Hot Startup Theranos Has Struggled with Its Blood-Testing Technology

Dozens of Potential Jurors in Elizabeth Holmes Trial Cut for Potential Bias

Case 5:18-cr-00258-EJD Document 973

Case 5:18-cr-00258-EJD Document 976

Elizabeth Holmes Claims Abuse by Ex-Boyfriend Who Controlled What She Ate in Theranos Fraud Trial Defense

Elizabeth Holmes Plans to Accuse Ex-Boyfriend of Abuse at Theranos Fraud Trial

Elizabeth Holmes Gives Birth as Fraud Theranos Fraud Trial Nears

Former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes Is Pregnant, Causing a Further Delay in Her Trial Date

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