Theranos’ discredited founder Elizabeth Holmes surrendered to authorities on Tuesday.

Theranos’ discredited founder Elizabeth Holmes turned herself in on Tuesday to start serving her 11-year, 3-month jail sentence, according to the Bureau of Federal Prisons.

Holmes, 39, reported to the minimum-security Federal Prison Camp Bryan in Texas, which holds 655 female prisoners. She grew up in Houston, which is around 100 miles from the penitentiary.

Inmates will be given jobs and have the chance to take part in wellness initiatives, religious services, and recreational pursuits, according to the prison’s guidebook.

In 2022, Holmes was found guilty on four charges of fraud related to her medical startup, which defrauded investors of millions of dollars.

Holmes’ attorneys said the conviction was unfair and that Holmes did not plan to defraud investors in a 132-page appeal they submitted earlier this year asking for a reduction in prison term, PEOPLE previously reported.

“The government’s case largely parroted the public narrative,” the appeal claims. The charge that Holmes purposefully and willfully misrepresented to investors the capabilities of Theranos’s technology was front and center for the government.

She asked to be released from prison while she appealed her sentence, but she was turned down.

In April, Holmes gave birth to her second child.

Her spouse, hotel heir Billy Evans, pleaded for a lenient term for Holmes in a sentencing document, arguing that she would miss out on special occasions with the couple’s two young children.

According to criminal justice reform advocate and former federal inmate Lynn Espejo, “Her kids might see her for a few hours on the weekends” while she was incarcerated.

The prison handbook states that Holmes will have access to video calls and will be given 300 minutes of calling time each month, divided into 15-minute blocks.

Her family will be permitted to see her for at least four hours each month, “but usually the prison can provide more,” according to the prison website.

As the founder and CEO of Theranos, which deceived investors by falsely claiming that their technology could run hundreds of medical tests using just a few drops of blood, Holmes initially gained notoriety in 2014.

For statements she made to Silicon Valley investors and clients, Holmes was accused with 11 counts of fraud. Three counts of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to conduct wire fraud were among the four accusations on which the jury found Holmes guilty.

As the founder and CEO of Theranos, which deceived investors by falsely claiming that their technology could run hundreds of medical tests using just a few drops of blood, Holmes initially gained notoriety in 2014.

For statements she made to Silicon Valley investors and clients, Holmes was accused with 11 counts of fraud. Three counts of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to conduct wire fraud were among the four accusations on which the jury found Holmes guilty.