“Every day, you are just challenging yourself like ‘This is wrong. I feel sick, like I can’t do this,'" former employee Erika Cheung said of realizing Elizabeth Holmes' startup Theranos was providing inaccurate blood test results.
Elizabeth Holmes was found guilty of fraud and conspiracy related to her startup blood-testing company and faces up to 20 years in prison for each count.
The federal fraud trial of former Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes is nearing its conclusion as her defense is set to wrap up its closing arguments before a jury begins deliberations.
A jury will soon take up the question of whether Elizabeth Holmes knowingly misled investors about her supposedly revolutionary blood-testing technology, or whether she was simply overly optimistic about its potential.
U.S. Attorney Robert Leach will ask the Theranos founder and CEO about what she knew about her failing company during what could be the last week of the trial.
CNBC's "American Greed" premieres with a look at Rep. Matt Gaetz's former associate Joel Greenberg and then tackles alleged fraudster Elizabeth Holmes for its 200th episode.