Elizabeth Holmes requested a new trial on Tuesday, asserting in a court filing that a key witness for the prosecution now regrets the role he played in her conviction for investor fraud and conspiracy related to Theranos, her failed blood-testing startup.
The petition centers on the reliability of testimony provided by the former Theranos lab director Adam Rosendorff, who said he repeatedly raised concerns about the accuracy of blood tests that were being administered to patients during his tenure in 2013 and 2014. It is typical for defendants to make motions for a new trial after a guilty verdict.
Holmes, 38, was convicted on four felony counts of investor fraud and conspiracy earlier this year after a nearly four-month trial. The former CEO is currently free on bail but is facing up to 20 years in prison at a sentencing hearing scheduled for 17 October 2022 in San Jose, California.
When the former lab director was reached via LinkedIn by the Associated Press, he declined to comment, adding: “Do not contact me.”
The defendant’s lawyers argued in a 17-page filing that Rosendorff was now expressing misgivings about his testimony, based on recent actions described in the court document. They stated that Rosendorff had appeared at the home Holmes shares with her partner, William Evans, on the evening of 8 August 2022 in an attempt to meet with her. Evans intercepted Rosendorff, according to the document, and asked him to leave.
Before departing, according to the filing, Rosendorff told Evans that during his trial testimony “he tried to answer the questions honestly but that the prosecutors tried to make everyone look bad” and now feels like “he had done something wrong”.
Before he appeared at Holmes’ residence, the document said,
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