New York Post

MEAN PILL OF HEALTH

Even pharma scum’s own lawyer wanted to punch him

- By JANE RIDLEY

VERY time disgraced former pharmaceut­ical tycoon Martin Shkreli hosted online chats to clap back at his critics, the infamous price gouger — universall­y detested for jacking up the cost of a lifesaving drug — appeared to delight in his own obnoxious behavior.

The Brooklyn native, who boasted about his supposed good looks on national TV, would grab his crotch, cackle like the Joker and hurl obscenitie­s at followers trying in vain to interrupt the one-sided conversati­on.

“He is good at getting under people’s skin,” Shkreli’s former partner, Christie Smythe, says in the upcoming documentar­y “Pharma Bro,” available on demand starting Tuesday.

“He thinks that [the goading] is fun,” she adds.

Brent Hodge, the film’s director, told The Post that his interest in Shkreli was sparked by damning headlines published in September 2015. Nearly all of them branded the then-32-year-old businessma­n “public enemy No. 1.”

The media was incensed by the news that Shkreli, then CEO of Turing Pharmaceut­icals, had dramatical­ly increased the cost of its anti-parasitic drug Daraprim. The price of a single pill skyrockete­d overnight from $13.50 to $750 — a staggering increase of 5,456 percent.

Many people who’d been prescribed the medication could no longer afford it. The most vulnerable patients affected by the hike were cancer sufferers, pregnant women, newborns and people with HIV.

Most companies would have hired a crisis management team to deal with the fallout, but Shkreli insisted on doing his own p.r. “It was a car crash,” said Hodge.

For example, when he was asked in December 2015 if he would have done things differentl­y if he could “rewind the clock,” his response was infuriatin­gly glib. “I probably would have raised prices higher,” Shkreli said, with his trademark smirk.

As Hodge understate­dly points out in his 90-minute documentar­y: “The whole thing wasn’t helped by Martin being a jerk.”

In truth, he believes the convicted felon — who is currently serving seven years for securities fraud unrelated to the drug’s price hike — is thrilled with his reputation as “the most hated man in America.”

“It’s all a performanc­e,” Hodge said. “He likes to play up his position as a supervilla­in.”

Still, it’s virtually impossible to dissect Shkreli’s true character. “We set out to explore his personalit­y and motivation, but didn’t totally figure him out,” added Hodge.

AS part of his efforts to understand Shkreli’s psyche, the “Pharma Bro” director took the unusual step of moving into his subject’s apartment building in Midtown. He lived there for 12 months to keep close tabs on him.

Hodge spent no fewer than five years working on the film. The process involved watching endless recordings of Shkreli’s livestream­s, questionin­g his former associates and ex-girlfriend­s and speaking to a patient burned by the Daraprim price scandal.

Among the key interviewe­es he secured were defense attorney Benjamin Brafman, who represente­d Shkreli at his 2017 fraud trial in Brooklyn federal court, and Ghostface Killah, a leading member of the New York hip-hop group Wu-Tang Clan.

The musicians were unwittingl­y drawn into the Shkreli saga in 2015 when the wealthy entreprene­ur spent $2 million on the only copy that exists of their album “Once Upon a Time in Shaolin.”

It was sold by the US government at auction this summer to an anonymous buyer. The proceeds were used to pay off a portion of the $7.4 million fine imposed on Shkreli by Judge Kiyo Matsumoto, who

presided over his trial.

In “Pharma Bro,” Ghostface, whose real name is Dennis Coles, says Shkreli’s purchase of the album — which he claimed to use as a coaster — was disrespect­ful of his music.

As for the Daraprim price gouge, he adds: “That move [Shkreli] did was a fake-ass gangster move. You wanna jump from $13 to $750 for one f - - king pill? That s - - t better make you live for a million years.”

Veteran attorney Brafman makes it clear in the film that Shkreli was a tough client to represent before his 2017 fraud conviction.

“There were times I wanted to wrap my arms around Martin and hug him and there were times I wanted to punch him in the face,” he says in the documentar­y.

MEANWHILE, former Bloomberg employee Smythe, who reported on Shkreli’s trial, found herself irresistib­ly drawn to the fraudster. They later began an affair that destroyed both her marriage and career.

“I’ve had kind of a unique relationsh­ip with him,” she says in a Fox News interview that’s sampled in “Pharma Bro.” “It hasn’t been like [the one he has] with other journalist­s. He trusts me and takes what I say seriously.”

“He’s open with me in a way that he is not with most people,” Smythe claims.

Talking to Hodge, she confirms that Shkreli embraces controvers­y and revels in his notoriety.

“You can’t really cage Martin Shkreli,” she says. “You can’t tell someone who thrives on conflict to not create more conflict.”

In the Fox segment, she recalls a pivotal moment in the couple’s romance. “I visited Martin in prison and I just simply told him that I loved him,” Smythe says. “He said that he loved me too.”

When the reporter asks Smythe if she once told Shkreli “I want to have children with you,” she answers that she had. She also shows pride in being “the only woman he ever introduced to his parents.”

As for the future, Smythe says she would “love Martin to get out” of prison and is confident that, as a reformed man, he’d then use his razorsharp mind for good.

“I would love him to start working on something productive that helps the world,” she says on Fox. “And I’d like to play some kind of role in helping him to get there. That’s my dream.”

But their love wasn’t enough for Shkreli to turn over a new leaf.

After she revealed their affair to Elle in an article published late last year, he appeared to unceremoni­ously dump her via a press statement to the magazine.

And yet Smythe still stands by her former love.

Just this week she tweeted the message: “Find someone who clings to you like the media clings to Martin Shkreli as evil incarnate. (He is not. He’s a messy guy. There are a lot of messy people walking this planet. For the record, I like complicate­d people a lot more than sanctimoni­ous ones.)”

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 ?? ?? FACE OF DECEIT: Hedge funder Shkreli was taken into custody in 2015, and convicted in 2017, on fraud charges unrelated to his price gouging.
FACE OF DECEIT: Hedge funder Shkreli was taken into custody in 2015, and convicted in 2017, on fraud charges unrelated to his price gouging.
 ?? ?? BODY AND TROLL: Martin Shkreli gained notoriety in 2015, after jacking up the price of a lifesaving drug from $13.50 to $750. The profiteer, who is currently serving a seven-year sentence for securities fraud, is the subject of new film “Pharma Bro,” out Tuesday, which features his former girlfriend Christie Smythe (far left).
BODY AND TROLL: Martin Shkreli gained notoriety in 2015, after jacking up the price of a lifesaving drug from $13.50 to $750. The profiteer, who is currently serving a seven-year sentence for securities fraud, is the subject of new film “Pharma Bro,” out Tuesday, which features his former girlfriend Christie Smythe (far left).

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