In her first interview from prison, Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes shares insights about her life after her conviction for fraud. Holmes details her structured daily routine, including early mornings, exercise, and her prison jobs, earning only 31 cents an hour as a clerk. Despite the challenges, she remains firm in her belief of innocence regarding her actions tied to Theranos, asserting, "failure is not fraud." Holmes also discusses her dietary changes, her reading habits, and maintaining communication with her family while incarcerated.
I truly did not think I would ever be convicted or found guilty. I refused to plead guilty to crimes I did not commit. Theranos failed. But failure is not fraud.
Holmes has several jobs in the prison, including one as a reentry clerk, for which she makes 31 cents an hour helping prisoners expected to be released soon.
Collection
[
|
...
]