
Elizabeth Holmes criminal trial dominated by allegations of deception and intimidation from those who worked for her
ABC News
Weeks into the criminal trial of Elizabeth Holmes, jurors have already heard allegations of lies and alleged intimidation from those who worked directly under her.
Just three weeks into the criminal trial of Elizabeth Holmes, jurors have already heard allegations of lies, deception and alleged intimidation from those who worked directly under her -- and the trial is expected to continue into December.
"I was scared that things would not go well," one former Theranos scientist, Surekha Gangakhedkar, told prosecutors when asked why she made copies of internal communications and documents before resigning from the company. "I was also worried that I would be blamed."
A full recap of last week's proceedings is available on today's episode of "The Dropout: Elizabeth Holmes on Trial" free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Theranos was founded by Holmes in 2003. The company claimed to be developing blood testing technology that used only small droplets of blood.
