Bloomberg Law
June 3, 2021, 7:51 PM UTC

Elizabeth Holmes Emails With Boies Are Fair Game for Trial (2)

Joel Rosenblatt
Joel Rosenblatt
Bloomberg News

<-bsp-bb-link state="{"bbHref":"bbg://securities/3685511Z%20US%20Equity","_id":"00000179-d372-d60b-ad7d-f77371220000","_type":"0000016b-944a-dc2b-ab6b-d57ba1cc0000"}">Theranos Inc. founder <-bsp-person state="{"_id":"00000179-d372-d60b-ad7d-f77371220001","_type":"00000160-6f41-dae1-adf0-6ff519590003"}">Elizabeth Holmes lost a fight to limit what jurors can learn at her criminal fraud trial about how she worked with lawyer <-bsp-person state="{"_id":"00000179-d372-d60b-ad7d-f77371220002","_type":"00000160-6f41-dae1-adf0-6ff519590003"}">David Boies to try to stop an expose by the Wall Street Journal ahead of the startup’s collapse.

A judge on Thursday ruled that a series of emails between the Stanford University dropout-turned-entrepreneur and the famed litigator are fair game for prosecutors to present at Holmes’s upcoming trial. The messages remain sealed from public view, but court filings and Holmes’s lawyers at a hearing revealed they concern the Journal’s 2015 reporting by John Carreyrou that ...

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