Martin Shkreli, the eccentric former
pharmaceutical CEO notorious for a price-gouging scandal and for his
snide “Pharma Bro” persona on social media, was convicted Friday on
federal charges he deceived investors in a pair of failed hedge funds.
A Brooklyn jury deliberated five days before finding Shkreli guilty on
three of eight counts. He had been charged with securities fraud,
conspiracy to commit securities fraud and conspiracy to commit wire
fraud.
Prosecutors had accused Shkreli of repeatedly misleading investors about
what he was doing with their money. Mostly, he was blowing it with
horrible stock picks, forcing him to cook up a scheme to recover
millions in losses, they said.
Shkreli, 34, told “lies upon lies,” including claiming he had $40
million in one of his funds at a time when it only had about $300 in the
bank, Assistant U.S. Attorney Alixandra Smith said in closing arguments.
The trial “has exposed Martin Shkreli for who he really is — a con man
who stole millions,” added another prosecutor, Jacquelyn Kasulis.
But the case was tricky for the government because investors, some
wealthy financiers from Texas, testified at the trial conceded that
Shkreli’s scheme actually succeeded in making them richer, in some cases
doubling or even tripling their money on his company’s stock when it
went public. The defense portrayed them as spoiled “rich people” who
were the ones doing the manipulating.
“Who lost anything? Nobody,” defense attorney Ben Brafman said in his
closing argument. Some investors had to admit on the witness stand that
partnering with Shkreli was “the greatest investment I’ve ever made,” he
added.
For the boyish-looking Shkreli, one of the biggest problems was not part
of the case - his purchase in 2014 of rights to a life-saving drug that
he promptly raised the price from $13.50 to $750 per pill. Several
potential jurors were kept off the panel after expressing distain for
the defendant, with one calling him a “snake” and another “the face of
corporate greed.”
The defendant also came into the trial with a reputation for trolling
his critics on social media to a degree that got him kicked off Twitter
and for live-streaming himself giving math lessons or doing nothing more
than petting his cat, named Trashy. Among his other antics: boasting
about buying a one-of-a-kind Wu-Tang Clan album for $2 million.
During about a month of testimony, Shkreli appeared engaged at times,
grinning when his lawyer described him as a misunderstood misfit. Other
times he looked bored, staring into space and playing with his hair.
Shkreli, who comes from an Albanian family in Brooklyn, was arrested in
2015 on charges he looted another drug company he founded, Retrophin, of
$11 million in stock and cash to pay back the hedge fund investors.
Investors took the witness stand to accuse Shkreli of keeping them in
the dark as his scheme unfolded.
“I don’t think it mattered to him — it was just what he thought he could
get away with,” said Richard Kocher, a New Jersey construction company
owner who invested $200,000 with Shkreli in 2012. “It was insulting.”
Shkreli’s lawyer agreed his client could be annoying, saying, “In terms
of people skills, he’s impossible,” and referring to him as a “nerd” and
a “mad scientist.” But he said his hedge fund investors knew what they
were getting.
“They found him strange. They found him weird. And they gave him money.
Why? Because they recognized genius,” Brafman said, adding that they had
signed agreements that his client wasn’t liable if they lost their
money.
Jurors also heard odd vignettes befitting the quirky defendant: how
Shkreli slept on the floor of his office in a sleeping bag for two
years; how a drug company board member and former American Express
executive wrote an email saying he’d meet with Shkreli “only if I can
touch your soft skin”; how Shkreli wrote a letter to the wife of an
employee threatening to make the family homeless if the man didn’t
settle a debt.
Shkreli didn’t testify. But rather than lay low like his lawyers wanted,
he got into the act by using Facebook to bash prosecutors and news
organizations covering his case. In one recent post, he wrote, “My case
is a silly witch hunt perpetrated by self-serving prosecutors. ... Drain
the swamp. Drain the sewer that is the (Department of Justice.)”
The judge ordered Shkreli to keep his mouth shut in and around the
courtroom after another rant to new reporters covering the trial.
Prosecutors “blame me for everything,” he said. “They blame me for
capitalism.”
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