1/ Not many things stay buried forever.
Over the last four years, I've been digging into the ways at-home DNA kits are shattering the secrets of the baby business.🧬
I tell this story in a new podcast out today. Listen + subscribe on @ApplePodcasts. 🎧https://t.co/wH7yr1aCRm
A verdict has been reached in the Elizabeth Holmes trial. Don’t miss the season finale of Bad Blood: The Final Chapter, out this Thursday.
Catch up on the trial here: https://t.co/PhA6yL5Jh3
One of the ways Elizabeth Holmes fooled investors was by showing them a doctored report that suggested that Pfizer had validated Theranos’ technology.
🎧 https://t.co/wMLKsvptSZ
The Theranos trial is even more nuts than I had imagined it would be. @JohnCarreyrou's podcast, which provides extensive background on the criminal charges that Holmes faces and coverage of the trial itself, is *excellent.*
https://t.co/xmBEZ7mZrg
In this week’s episode of Bad Blood: The Final Chapter, John Carreyrou dissects the sequence of events that led to Elizabeth Holmes amassing over $800 million dollars from a group of gullible of investors.
👉 https://t.co/7zskhFULX9
Elizabeth Holmes managed to convince several powerful investors into plowing hundreds of millions of dollars into her unproven blood-testing startup. Find out how she did it in a new episode of Bad Blood: The Final Chapter, out this Thursday.
➡️ https://t.co/3UmKOXufLl
Bad Blood listeners, there seem to be some technical issues keeping Apple Podcast subscribers from accessing the latest “This Week in Court” episode. We’re doing everything we can to get that episode to you as quickly as possible. Thank you for sticking with us!
Tyler Shultz witnessed a lot of bad science happening at Theranos and he tried to tell his grandfather George Shultz about it, but it fell on deaf ears. Listen to how Elizabeth Holmes pitted a grandfather against his grandson in this week’s episode.
➡️ https://t.co/Y0z0nmcxKW
After Tyler Shultz started speaking up about what was really going on behind the scenes at Theranos, Elizabeth Holmes came after him with everything she had.
https://t.co/cGGmixEs7d
George Shultz introduced Elizabeth Holmes to lots of high-profile people. But there’s one person she probably wishes she never met: his grandson, Tyler Shultz. Find out why in a new episode of Bad Blood: The Final Chapter, out this Thursday.
https://t.co/rXbPFHe2uT
When Elizabeth Holmes wanted something, she charmed powerful people and got them to do her bidding. But when it came to the DOD, Theranos couldn't bypass the bureaucracy and its lack of FDA approval became a sticking point.
🎧 https://t.co/AFKNq9Uz0y
As prosecutors have started to point out at trial, Elizabeth Holmes made many misleading statements about Theranos’ relationship with the U.S. military. One of her most serious lies? Claiming Theranos devices were deployed on the battlefield.
🎧https://t.co/q136FmFP5w
Elizabeth Holmes frequently misrepresented Theranos' relationship with the U.S. military to investors and now it’s a key part of the prosecution’s case against her. Learn more in the new episode of Bad Blood: The Final Chapter, out this Thursday. https://t.co/t4wS7mx2Au
Doing fake demos of its devices for prospective investors and the board was common practice at Theranos. Through witnesses and email evidence, prosecutors in Elizabeth Holmes' trial are trying to convince the jury that Holmes knew the demos were fake.
🎧https://t.co/NqMx25DUJk
Theranos devices were set to run a "null protocol" during investor demos that made the devices look like they were running properly. But inside the little black box, the components were a jumbled mess.
🎧 https://t.co/xgJXb3m9L3
Theranos had to get creative when it did demos of its often-malfunctioning blood-testing devices for investors and partners. How did the company's workaround manage to deceive so many? Find out in the new episode of Bad Blood: The Final Chapter, out this Thursday.
Elizabeth Holmes' criminal fraud trial hinges on what she did and didn't know while she was CEO of Theranos. Prosecutors have already introduced dozens of emails at trial showing she was CC'ed on or forwarded information about faulty blood test results from Theranos devices.
Elizabeth Holmes wooed investors by claiming to have blood-testing devices that were smaller and faster than its competitors, but just as accurate. In reality, Theranos managed to stay afloat for so long because it secretly modified commercially available machines.