Smiling Shkreli silent before House

Drug profit denounced

Benjamin Brafman, attorney for Martin Shkreli (foreground), speaks Thursday during a hearing of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee in Washington.
Benjamin Brafman, attorney for Martin Shkreli (foreground), speaks Thursday during a hearing of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee in Washington.

WASHINGTON -- Former pharmaceutical chief Martin Shkreli refused to testify Thursday in an appearance before U.S. lawmakers about price increases for a drug sold by a company that he acquired, vexing the committee members questioning him.

Shkreli appeared to smile throughout his hourlong appearance and, moments afterward, insulting tweets began to appear under his official account calling the lawmakers "imbeciles."

Shkreli, widely scorned for raising the price of a long-established and potentially lifesaving drug by more than 5,000 percent, utilized his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination when he went before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.

The entrepreneur and former hedge fund manager -- who has been unapologetic about the price increase -- intoned before the committee, "On the advice of counsel I invoke my Fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination and respectfully decline to answer your question" four times, prompting angry responses from lawmakers.

Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland, the top Democrat on the committee, told the 32-year-old Shkreli to reconsider his actions.

"I call this money blood money ... coming out of the pockets of hardworking Americans," Cummings said, as Shkreli sat through the lecture. "I know you are smiling, but I am very serious, sir. I truly believe you can become a force of tremendous good. All I ask is that you reflect on it. No, I don't ask, I beg that you reflect on it."

Shkreli was dismissed less than an hour into the hearing, but not before Chairman Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah. shouted down a request by Shkreli's attorney to speak. Lawmakers, instead, took turns denouncing his conduct and attitude.

Minutes after Shkreli walked out of the room on his official Twitter account appeared the message, "Hard to accept that these imbeciles represent the people in our government."

It could not immediately be confirmed if those tweets were written by Shkreli. Cummings, attributing them to Shkreli, boiled over.

"There are very real issues for people with compromised immune systems," he said as he asked Turing Pharmaceuticals executive Nancy Retzlaff to interpret the messages on Shkreli's Twitter account.

Shkreli faces separate criminal charges of securities fraud in connection with another drug company he owned.

The lawmakers had summoned him to answer for the decision to raise the price for Daraprim, the only approved drug for a rare and sometimes deadly parasitic infection.

Shkreli, who pleaded innocent after his arrest in December in New York, has been out on $5 million bail. He walked into the packed hearing room well before the session began. A few members of the House panel snapped Shkreli's photo on their cellphones.

Also appearing before the lawmakers was Turing's chief commercial officer and the interim CEO of Canada's largest drugmaker, Valeant Pharmaceuticals. Documents from Valeant and Turing show they have made a practice of buying and then dramatically raising prices for low-cost drugs given to patients with life-threatening conditions including heart disease, AIDS and cancer, according to excerpts released this week by the House panel.

The two companies' executives insisted they were committed to ensuring that cost isn't a deterrent for patients who need the drugs.

With Shkreli mum, it was up to Retzlaff to defend the Daraprim price rise. She said about 3,000 people are treated by Daraprim, and only 25 percent are covered by commercial insurance. She added that the overall impact of the drug on the budget of commercial health plans "is very, very small."

Documents show how executives at both companies planned to maximize profits while fending off negative publicity over the price increases.

Presentations by Turing executives, part of the trove of documents obtained by the panel, show that as early as last May, the company planned to turn Daraprim into a $200-million-a-year drug by dramatically increasing its price. Turing bought the 60-year-old drug from Impax Laboratories in August for $55 million and swiftly raised its price.

Shkreli said in an email to one contact: "We raised the price from $1,700 per bottle to $75,000. Should be a very handsome investment for all of us."

But anticipating a possible backlash, the company warned in an internal memo that advocates for HIV patients might react to the price change.

Valeant likewise identified revenue goals first and then used drug prices to reach them, committee staff said in a memo. It said Valeant believed it could repeatedly raise the prices of Nitropress and Isuprel without repercussions because they're administered by hospitals, which are less price-sensitive than consumers.

Valeant used patient assistance programs to distract attention and justify its price increases, according to the memo.

Information for this article was contributed by Tom Murphy of The Associated Press.

Business on 02/05/2016

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