Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes was found guilty on Monday of conspiring to defraud investors in her blood-testing startup that she has built into a $9 billion company. A jury in San Jose, California, found Holmes guilty of four of 11 charges of fraud after seven days of deliberations, with each count carrying a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. Holmes, 37, was convicted by the jury of eight men and four women of three counts of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud by lying to investors about her company’s blood testing capabilities to raise funds for Theranos. She was acquitted on three counts of defrauding patients who paid for tests from Theranos, and a related conspiracy charge. The jury could not reach a decision on three counts related to individual investors, for which U.S. District Judge Edward Davila said he intends to declare a …