Martin
Shkreli attributes arrest to drug-price hikes: WSJ
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[December 21, 2015]
(Reuters) - Martin Shkreli, the
pharmaceutical entrepreneur facing U.S. charges of securities fraud, has
said he had been the target of legal authorities for his much-criticized
drug-price hikes and his over-the-top public persona, the Wall Street
Journal reported.
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Shkreli, who was arrested on Thursday and released soon after on a
$5 million bond, has been charged for engaging in what U.S.
prosecutors said was a Ponzi-like scheme at his former hedge fund
MSMB Capital Management and Retrophin Inc, a company he headed
before he took the helm of Turing Pharmaceuticals Inc. The maximum
sentence for the top count is 20 years in prison.
Earlier this year, after buying a 60-year-old drug called Daraprim,
Turing raised the price overnight to $750 a tablet from $13.50. The
increase propelled Shkreli to the media spotlight: Presidential
candidate Hillary Clinton pilloried him for gouging, and he was
pulled into congressional drug pricing investigations.
The government charges do not include activities at privately held
Turing.
"'Trying to find anything we could to stop him' was the attitude of
the government," Shkreli told the Journal in an interview, saying he
was arrested because of a social experiment and teasing people over
the Internet, and called the arrest unjust.
According to the Journal, a Federal Bureau of Investigation official
earlier said Shkreli pursued "a securities fraud trifecta of lies,
deceit and greed."
While being unapologetic about the price of Daraprim, Shkreli added
in the interview that Turing, from which he resigned as chief
executive after the arrest, might change its approach.
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Turing, on Friday, replaced Shkreli with Ron Tilles, who has been
chairman of the company since its launch. They co-founded the
pharmaceutical company, Retrophin.
Reuters could not independently reach the FBI and Brooklyn U.S.
Attorney's office for comment outside regular U.S. business hours.
In a separate incident, on Sunday, Martin Shkreli had lost control
of his Twitter account to hackers, hours after he took to Twitter to
plead his innocence, his spokesman said.
(Reporting by Sneha Teresa Johny in Benagluru; Editing by Sunil
Nair)
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