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Elizabeth Holmes Concludes Day 2 of Her Testimony


ImageElizabeth Holmes, the Theranos founder, leaving the federal courthouse in San Jose, Calif., on Monday.
Credit…Jim Wilson/The New York Times

SAN JOSE, Calif. — After weathering months of accusations that she lied to get money for her blood testing start-up, Theranos, Elizabeth Holmes, the embattled Silicon Valley entrepreneur who is on trial for fraud, sharpened her defense on Monday.

In just under two hours of testimony, Ms. Holmes pushed back against accusations that she had lied about Theranos’s work with drug companies. She also pointed the blame at the scientists and doctors who had worked at her start-up, saying she believed what they had told her about Theranos’s technology.

And throughout it all, Ms. Holmes’s defense bolstered the idea it has been pushing since the start of the trial: She may have made mistakes, but failure is not a crime.

“We thought this was a really big idea,” Ms. Holmes said about Theranos’s machines, which she once promised could run a long list of medical tests from just a few drops of their blood.

It was her second day of testimony in a trial that has gripped Silicon Valley and become a referendum on start-up culture and just how far entrepreneurs will take their hubristic claims of changing the world. For her lawyers, the idea on Monday was to show the kernel of truth that may have existed in some of the most blatant misrepresentations that prosecutors attributed to her.

Ms. Holmes, 37, has been charged with 11 counts of fraud and conspiracy to commit fraud. She has pleaded not guilty. If convicted, she faces up to 20 years in prison.

Her testimony has been the star attraction at a trial where more than 30 witnesses have been called over the past three months into a San Jose, Calif., courtroom to testify. Ms. Holmes had watched the proceedings quietly, her expression obscured behind a medical mask. On Friday, the prosecution had rested its case.

Ms. Holmes is the rare Silicon Valley executive to be tried on fraud charges. While the world of tech start-ups is known for its culture of hustle and hype, few have risen as high or fallen as dramatically as Theranos — and even fewer of their leaders have been indicted on accusations that they lied to investors. Over 13 years, Theranos raised nearly $1 billion in funding, valuing it at $9 billion. After The Wall Street Journal revealed in 2015 that Theranos’s technology did not work as advertised, the company unraveled. It shut down in 2018.

Ms. Holmes’s decision to testify is a risky one that shocked the courtroom out of its Friday afternoon lull last week. She has opened herself up to cross-examination by prosecutors and also risks perjury.

But experts have argued that she had no choice but to defend herself, given the evidence presented by prosecutors. That has included text messages that showed Ms. Holmes was aware of Theranos’s technology problems and testimony about faked demonstrations of…



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