Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes in a black suit jacket in a San Jose courtroom
Elizabeth Holmes, former CEO of Theranos, in a San Jose courtroom in September.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
  • Elizabeth Holmes was found guilty of four fraud-related charges after a week of jury deliberation.
  • One juror said they scored witness testimonies on how trustworthy they were, ABC News reported.
  • The jury created a trustworthiness scale ranging from one to four stars Holmes scored a two.

The Elizabeth Holmes jury ranked witness testimonies on a trustworthiness scale ranging from one to four-stars during trial deliberations, a juror told ABC News.

Jurors gave Holmes a two, juror #6 Wayne Kaatz told the outlet. It was one of the lowest trust scores recorded, as no witness received a one-star score, he said.

The jury scored former US secretary of defense General Jim Mattis four stars, juror #11 Mike Kew said. Adam Rosendorff, the former Theranos lab director, also received the highest ranking. 

"We had to build an entire system to figure this out," Kew, a 60-year-old property manager from Santa Cruz told ABC News, adding that the jury's courtroom was a "war room" completely covered in sticky notes. 

Holmes was found guilty of three counts of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud on Monday. She was found not guilty on four other counts, and jurors were unable to reach a unanimous verdict on the remaining three counts against her.

Even though the former Theranos CEO's 7-day testimony was reportedly given two-stars by the jury, Kew said he still believed Holmes was being genuine. 

Reaching a final verdict was complicated by Holmes' likeability and positive business goals, Kaatz said. While the jury convicted Holmes of committing fraud against investors, she was found not guilty of fraud against patients.

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