A federal judge has scheduled a late-September sentencing date for Theranos Inc. founder Elizabeth Holmes, when she could be handed prison time after her fraud conviction.

The Wednesday order from U.S. District Judge Edward Davila comes just over a week after a jury convicted Ms. Holmes of one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and three counts of wire fraud for intentionally deceiving investors about her now-defunct blood-testing startup.

The jurors acquitted Ms. Holmes of four counts tied to Theranos patients and failed to reach a unanimous verdict on three others related to defrauding investors, leaving the government with the option of retrying the undecided counts.

Prosecutors, in a filing made jointly Tuesday evening with attorneys for Ms. Holmes, said they will move to dismiss the three hung counts.

The judge set Sept. 26 for sentencing, broadly in line with what prosecutors and Ms. Holmes’s attorneys suggested. That means Ms. Holmes would remain out on bail for at least the next eight and a half months. Her $500,000 bond must now be secured by property, according to the Tuesday filing.

Judge Davila also set a June 16 court date to address motions Ms. Holmes’s defense team is expected to make in the coming months requesting a new trial or a reversal of her conviction.

Each of the four counts that Ms. Holmes was convicted of carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. A review of prior cases indicates she is likely to get far less than the 80 years she could technically face. Judge Davila, who oversaw the monthslong proceeding, will have the final say and, under federal sentencing guidelines, has great leeway in handing down a punishment.

A federal jury convicted Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes on four of 11 charges. Each count carries a maximum prison sentence of 20 years. WSJ’s Sara Randazzo shares highlights from Holmes’s testimony. Photo: Josh Edelson for The Wall Street Journal

Delaying the sentencing gives the government time to complete another trial tied to Theranos, that of Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani, Ms. Holmes’s top deputy and former boyfriend. He has pleaded not guilty to 12 counts of conspiracy and wire fraud.

Mr. Balwani’s trial is set to begin in mid-March after the latest wave of the coronavirus pandemic delayed a February start date.

At a hearing held by teleconference last week, an attorney for Mr. Balwani pushed back on any further delays, saying his client has waited long enough.

“We’ll be in trial soon,” Judge Davila assured him.

A separate Tuesday evening filing, jointly made by prosecutors and Mr. Balwani’s legal team, shows he has agreed to the new timeline. The filing lays out a March 15 schedule for opening statements for Mr. Balwani’s case.

Prosecutors indicted Ms. Holmes and Mr. Balwani in June 2018, following reporting by The Wall Street Journal that Theranos’s finger-prick blood-testing technology didn’t work and that the company was secretly using commercial machines for the majority of its blood tests.

Jurors heard at Ms. Holmes’s trial that Theranos rolled out its services in Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. pharmacies for patient use despite employees telling her the blood tests were unreliable. Ms. Holmes told investors Theranos technology had been vetted by major pharmaceutical companies and was being used by the U.S. military, claims that weren’t true, according to evidence presented in trial.

Theranos and the Elizabeth Holmes Trial

Write to Sara Randazzo at [email protected]

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Appeared in the January 13, 2022, print edition as ‘Holmes Faces September Sentencing.’

This post first appeared on wsj.com

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