Elizabeth Holmes Calls Prison Life 'Hell and Torture' in First Interview

By Jennifer A. • Feb 26, 2025
Elizabeth Holmes Calls Prison Life 'Hell and Torture' in First Interview-1

Elizabeth Holmes, once hailed as a visionary entrepreneur, is now serving time for one of the most notorious fraud cases in Silicon Valley history. Nearly two years into her prison sentence, the disgraced Theranos founder has given her first interview from behind bars. Holmes, who promised to revolutionize blood testing with just a few drops of blood, instead became a symbol of fraud in the tech world. Now, she's opening up about her life in prison, her ongoing legal battle, and what she hopes comes next.

Who Is Elizabeth Holmes?

Holmes founded Theranos in 2003, claiming the company's Edison device could conduct a range of blood tests with just a few drops of blood. Investors and high-profile figures, including former U.S. government officials and media moguls, backed her company, pushing its valuation to $9 billion at its peak.

Elizabeth Holmes Calls Prison Life “Hell and Torture” in First Interview-2 Elizabeth Holmes at TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco, 2014. Photo courtesy of Max Morse for TechCrunch under CC BY 2.0.

But the technology was a sham. In 2015, a Wall Street Journal exposé unraveled the truth: Theranos had been using commercially available testing machines instead of its own invention. By March 2018, Theranos had collapsed, and in June of that year, Holmes was indicted on fraud charges.

In 2022, she was convicted on four counts of fraud and sentenced to 11 years and three months in federal prison. After multiple failed attempts to overturn her conviction, Holmes reported to Federal Prison Camp Bryan in Bryan, Texas, on May 30, 2023.

Life in Prison

Now nearly two years into her sentence, Holmes has adjusted to the rigid routine of prison life. She wakes up before dawn, works out, and spends her days earning 31 cents an hour as a reentry clerk helping fellow inmates prepare for life after release. She also works as a law clerk and teaches French.

But despite settling in, Holmes describes her incarceration as deeply painful. "It's been hell and torture to be here," she told PEOPLE in her first prison interview. She's also undergoing therapy for PTSD and counseling other women who are survivors of abuse.

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One of her biggest struggles is being separated from her two children, 3-year-old William and 2-year-old Invicta. Holmes spoke about the heartbreak of watching her kids leave after visits, recalling how they make a heart sign with their fingers and tell her, "Mommy, this is our love," as reported by PEOPLE.

Holmes Still Maintains Her Innocence

Even behind bars, Holmes remains defiant about her role in the Theranos scandal. "Theranos failed. But failure is not fraud," she insisted in the interview with PEOPLE. She continues to assert that she never meant to deceive investors or patients and is appealing her conviction.

She's also trying to reinvent herself, again. Holmes has been drafting legislation she calls the American Freedom Act, which she says aims to reform the criminal justice system by bolstering the presumption of innocence. And despite being convicted of fraud in the healthcare space, she claims she's still working on medical technology and plans to return to the industry once she's released. "There is not a day I have not continued to work on my research and inventions," she told PEOPLE. "I remain completely committed to my dream of making affordable healthcare solutions available to everyone."

What's Next for Elizabeth Holmes?

Holmes is currently scheduled for release on April 3, 2032, as her sentence has already been reduced to nine years for good behavior. Until then, she seems determined to reshape her narrative, whether through legal reform efforts, new inventions, or media interviews.

The question remains: Will the world give her another chance? Given her history, the skepticism around her future endeavors is warranted. But if there's one thing Holmes has proven, it's that she knows how to keep people talking, even from behind bars.

References: Elizabeth Holmes Breaks Her Silence in First Interview from Prison: 'It's Been Hell and Torture' (Exclusive) | Theranos scandal: Who is Elizabeth Holmes and why was she on trial? | Hot Startup Theranos Has Struggled With Its Blood-Test Technology

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