Elizabeth Holmes, the disgraced founder of blood-testing startup Theranos, is reportedly living in a posh home on one of America’s most expensive estates as she goes on trial for fraud.
A traffic citation issued to Holmes’ partner, William “Billy” Evans — heir to the Evans Hotel Group — on March 17 revealed a new address for the couple at a home on Green Gables, a 74-acre, $135 million estate in Woodside, California, CNBC reported.
CNBC independently confirmed that Holmes and Evans are staying in one of the homes.
The Green Gables estate is about 40 minutes from the courthouse, further than her former home at Lombard Place Apartments in San Francisco.
The property boasts six homes, in addition to the main house, according to its listing on Christie’s International Real Estate.
Three swimming pools dot the grounds of the property as well as a tennis court, a flower and vegetable garden, and a reservoir that exclusively services the estate.
Green Gables was built in 1911 and the town of Woodside is “Silicon Valley’s wealthiest and most prestigious enclave,” according to the Christie’s listing.
The estate has served as a gathering place for dignitaries “including European royalty, senators, congressmen, governors, business leaders, and creative luminaries,” and in 1965, the United Nations hosted its 20th anniversary commemoration gala at the estate, according to Christie’s.
Representatives for Christie’s did not return The Post’s request for comment.
The revelation that Holmes is staying at the fabled property comes as she prepares to deliver her opening statement in her high-profile fraud trial on Wednesday.
Holmes, 37, was once among Silicon Valley’s most high-profile founders and briefly crowned the country’s youngest female self-made billionaire.
She and her ex-boyfriend Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani, former Theranos COO, are charged with 10 counts of wire fraud and two counts of conspiracy in what’s expected to be one of the most widely watched corporate fraud trials in years.
Both Homes and Balwani, 56, have pleaded not guilty. Balwani will face his own trial next year.
The US Department of Justice charged Holmes and Balwani in 2018, accusing them of defrauding investors, medical professionals and customers.
Before her arrest, Holmes — a Steve Jobs wannabe who dressed exclusively in black turtlenecks — at one point scored a more than $9 billion valuation for Theranos.
Her company claimed to be able to detect medical conditions like cancer by using their new technology on a tiny sample of a customer’s blood.
Theranos eventually struck big-time deals with Walgreens and grocery chain Safeway.
Her board of directors boasted prominent US officials, including former Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger and George Shultz as well as former Secretary of Defense James Mattis.
And Theranos counted some of the country’s wealthiest business leaders, including former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, the Walton family of Walmart and Patriots owner Robert Kraft, among its investors. Some of those investors may testify at Holmes’ trial.
But the company’s medical claims were debunked in a 2015 Wall Street Journal article, sending Theranos’ sky-high valuation crashing down and sparking an eventual criminal investigation into Holmes and others involved in the business.
That day, Holmes went on CNBC’s “Mad Money” with Jim Cramer to rebuff the charges and claimed the paper was out to stifle innovation.
“First they call you crazy, then they fight you, then you change the world,” she said on CNBC, paraphrasing a quote that’s often misattributed to Mahatma Gandhi.
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