Martin Shkreli continues to run business from prison, report says
Martin Shkreli reportedly runs his pharmaceutical company from prison on a contraband smartphone. Shkreli continues to run the remains of the drug company that once earned him the title of most hated man in America, according to a story in the Wall Street Journal. He was convicted of securities fraud and conspiracy in 2017. He has served 16 months of a seven-year sentence in federal prison.
Shkreli is reportedly running Phoenixus AG, formerly known as Turing Pharmaceuticals. In 2015, when Shkreli was the CEO, Turing raised the price of the lifesaving drug Daraprim used by AIDS patients from $13.50 a pill to $750 a pill. The price hike sparked a public outcry.
The Journal says that Shkreli anticipates the company will grow more successful while he's in prison. He believes the company, of which he owns 40%, could be worth $3.7 billion by the time he gets out of prison.
On one recent phone call, Shkreli fired Phoenixus CEO Kevin Mulleady, the Journal reported. Shkreli reportedly later changed his mind, agreeing to suspend Mulleady rather than fire him.
Cartoon villain performance art.
Previously: Martin Shkreli Points Fingers at Other Pharmaceutical Companies
Martin Shkreli Convicted of Securities Fraud Charges, Optimistic About Sentencing
Martin Shkreli Lists Unreleased Wu-Tang Clan Album on eBay
Martin Shkreli's $5 Million Bail Revoked for Facebook Post Seeking Hillary Clinton's Hair
Sobbing Martin Shkreli Sentenced to 7 Years in Prison for Defrauding Investors
Related: Drug Firm Offers $1 Version of $750 Turing Pharmaceuticals Pill
Mylan Overcharged U.S. Government on EpiPens
EpiPen Maker is Facing Shareholder Backlash
FDA Has Named Names of Pharma Companies Blocking Cheaper Generics [Updated]
U.S. Hospitals Band Together to Form Civica Rx, a Non-Profit Pharmaceutical Company
Related Stories
Discussion from a September SoylentNews article.
From the Chicago Tribune:
Stepping into the furor over eye-popping price spikes for old generic medicines, a maker of compounded drugs will begin selling $1 doses of Daraprim, whose price recently was jacked up to $750 per pill by Turing Pharmaceuticals.
San Diego-based Imprimis Pharmaceuticals Inc., which mixes approved drug ingredients to fill individual patient prescriptions, said Thursday it will supply capsules containing Daraprim's active ingredients, pyrimethamine and leucovorin, for $99 for a 100-capsule bottle, via its website.
The 3 1/2-year-old drug compounding firm also plans to start making inexpensive versions of other generic drugs whose prices have skyrocketed, Chief Executive Mark Baum told The Associated Press.
"We are looking at all of these cases where the sole-source generic companies are jacking the price way up," Baum said in an interview. "There'll be many more of these" compounded drugs coming in the near future.
The high price of prescription medicines in the U.S. — from drugs for cancer and rare diseases that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars a year down to once-cheap generic drugs now costing many times their old price — has become a hot issue in the 2016 presidential race.
News that Turing, Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. and other drugmakers have bought rights to old, cheap medicines that are the only treatment for serious diseases and then hiked prices severalfold has angered patients. It's triggered government investigations, politicians' proposals to fight "price gouging," heavy media scrutiny and a big slump in biotech stock prices.
Well, that certainly didn't take long. At $99/100 pills, I expect the profits are slim indeed - but there is probably a profit. The company certainly can't afford to just give the stuff away.
So - if one company can show a profit at $1/pill, how in hell does anyone justify selling the pill for hundreds of dollars?
If you're going to overcharge the U.S. government, you don't want to get caught:
Mylan NV for years overcharged the U.S. Medicaid health program to buy its EpiPen shot, the government said Wednesday, despite being told that it needed to give bigger discounts under the law. From 2011 to 2015, the joint state-federal program for the poor spent about $797 million on EpiPens, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, said in a letter Wednesday. That included rebates of about 13 percent, but the U.S. should have been getting a larger discount of at least 23.1 percent.
While the agency didn't say exactly how much Mylan had overcharged, the amount could be substantial. Under law, companies are required to give [Medicaid] back any price increases they take on brand drugs above the rate of inflation, in addition to the 23.1 percent discount. Mylan, after acquiring the drug in 2007, has raised the price of EpiPen by about sixfold, to over $600 for a package of two. The government has in the past "expressly told Mylan that the product is incorrectly classified," CMS said in the letter, which came in response to an inquiry by Congress. "This incorrect classification has financial consequences for the amount that federal and state governments spend because it reduces the amount of quarterly rebates Mylan owes for EpiPen."
Previously:
EpiPen's Price Increased 400% since 2008
AllergyStop: $50 EpiPen is Production-Ready but...
Martin Shkreli, the former CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals AG, has launched a list to shame other pharmaceutical companies:
This week, a pharmaceutical trade group stepped up its efforts to distance itself from Martin Shkreli, the disgraced ex-CEO of several drug companies who gained notoriety for an eye-popping drug price increase and an indictment for securities fraud. The trade group even made a television ad to try to bolster its image and make clear that it is different—better—than the likes of Shkreli and his greedy ways.
Is it, though? If you ask Shkreli, it's not. And he's made a website to try to convince you.
On the bare-bones Pharmaskeletons.com, an angry and vengeful Shkreli lists instances of greed, criminal behavior, and other sleaziness of individual members of the pharmaceutical trade group PhRMA. Not all his claims are backed up, explained, or accurate. But the site still offers an embarrassing catalogue of bad deeds, which Shkreli told STAT he would continually update.
Dr. Lowe, from In the Pipeline, writes about the company responsible for EpiPen, with quotes taken from The New York Times:
To understand Mylan’s culture, consider a series of conversations that began inside the company in 2014.
In (2014) meetings, the executives began warning Mylan’s top leaders that the price increases seemed like unethical profiteering at the expense of sick children and adults, according to people who participated in the conversations. Over the next 16 months, those internal warnings were repeatedly aired. At one gathering, executives shared their concerns with Mylan’s chairman, Robert Coury.
Mr. Coury replied that he was untroubled. He raised both his middle fingers and explained, using colorful language, that anyone criticizing Mylan, including its employees, ought to go copulate with themselves. Critics in Congress and on Wall Street, he said, should do the same. And regulators at the Food and Drug Administration? They, too, deserved a round of anatomically challenging self-fulfillment.
[...] As the article says, the company has decided that all the criticism is just the cost of doing business, and that their business is selling EpiPens at the highest cost they can. Bad press, upset parents, calls for them to change – none of that means much.
[...] Another thing that happens when you operate this way is that other government agencies get motivated to take a closer look at you. Last fall, Mylan paid $465 million to settle a misclassification problem that led to them getting higher rebates than they should have on EpiPens distributed through Medicare. But now it appears that there’s another $1.27 billion involved, according the the Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General.
[...] As it happens, some of the company’s investors are trying to replace the board members, and just this morning, ISS (Institutional Shareholder Services) came down on their side. They’re recommending that shareholders vote against ten directors and against ratifying the compensation plans for the top executives. That’s a pretty big deal, since ISS handles the proxy voting for a lot of big investors and funds, and if given the go-ahead can vote things en masse. This, you can be sure, is a cause for concern in the upper suites, and it should be.
http://blogs.sciencemag.org/pipeline/archives/2017/06/12/mylan-begins-harvesting-the-crop-its-sown
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/04/business/angry-about-epipen-prices-executive-dont-care-much.html?_r=1
http://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/mylan-investors-rally-votes-against-chairman-coury-and-his-97m-pay-package
Previous Coverage of Mylan and their Practices:
https://soylentnews.org/article.pl?sid=16/10/06/021244
https://soylentnews.org/article.pl?sid=16/08/23/0136202
Martin Shkreli has been convicted of three of the eight charges he was facing:
A federal jury in Brooklyn, N.Y., has convicted former pharmaceutical executive and "pharma bro" Martin Shkreli of securities fraud.
He was found guilty Friday on three counts — two counts of securities fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud — out of a total of eight counts. Shkreli is best known for increasing the price of a life-saving drug for people with AIDS by 5,000 percent, from $13.50 to $750 per pill, when he was head of Turing Pharmaceuticals.
Shkreli has not been sentenced and faces up to 20 years in prison, as WSHU's Charles Lane tells our Newscast unit. Still, he declared victory when he was acquitted of what he termed the most "important charges."
"After the verdict was read, Shkreli and his lawyer said they were pleased and anticipated a light sentencing with minimal fines and no jail time," Lane reported. "During the trial, Shkreli openly mocked prosecutors and ultimately never took the stand in his defense."
What caused news outlets to start calling him "pharma bro"?
Also at Scientific American, Reuters , The New York Times, and The Guardian(opinion).
Following Martin Shkreli's conviction for securities fraud, he has listed his unreleased Wu-Tang Clan album on eBay. He purchased the album for $2 million in 2015 and has repeatedly threatened to destroy it:
Martin Shkreli may finally release the one-of-a-kind Wu-Tang album, Once Upon a Time in Shaolin, that he purchased back in 2015. The widely despised pharma bro has listed the album on eBay and is currently taking bids. At the time of publish, offers are hovering around $100,000.
The sale includes the double CD and a "finely crafted booklet," as well as legal expenses up to $25,000 "to ensure the final purchase details are mutually agreeable." In the listing, spotted by Page Six, Shkreli writes that he "decided to purchase this album as a gift to the Wu-Tang Clan for their tremendous musical output. Instead I received scorn from at least one of their (least-intelligent) members, and the world at large failed to see my purpose of putting a serious value behind music. I will be curious to see if the world values music nearly as much as I have." Shkreli claims that he will donate half of the sale proceeds to medical research.
[In the listing], Shkreli notes that "at any time I may cancel this sale and I may even break this album in frustration."
Martin Shkreli has been jailed following a peculiar Facebook post:
Martin Shkreli, the former pharmaceutical executive who is awaiting sentencing for a fraud conviction, was sent to jail on Wednesday after a federal judge revoked his bail because he had offered $5,000 for a strand of Hillary Clinton's hair.
Mr. Shkreli, who was free on $5 million bail while he awaited sentencing, had made two Facebook posts offering cash to anyone who could "grab a hair" from Mrs. Clinton during her book tour.
At the hearing in Federal District Court in Brooklyn, Judge Kiyo A. Matsumoto said that Mr. Shkreli's post could be perceived as a true threat. "That is a solicitation to assault in exchange for money that is not protected by the First Amendment," she said.
It's 7 Years in Prison for Martin Shkreli, Convicted of Fraud
A federal judge sentenced former pharmaceutical executive and hedge-fund manager Martin Shkreli to seven years in prison Friday following his earlier conviction on three of eight counts of securities and wire fraud charges.
According to reporters present in the Brooklyn courtroom, Shkreli gave an emotional and tearful speech prior to his sentencing, taking blame and responsibility for his actions and saying he had changed as a person since his conviction. US District Judge Kiyo Matsumoto reportedly handed him a box of tissues and took a lengthy amount of time reviewing his transgressions and history.
The sentencing caps a long, public saga for Shkreli, who is widely reviled for drastically raising the price of a cheap, decades-old drug, as well as provocative and offensive online antics, including harassing women.
Obligatory Nelson HaHa
Source: ArsTechnica
Sobbing "Pharma Bro" Martin Shkreli Sentenced to 7 Years in Prison for Defrauding Investors
KSWB-TV reports
He was convicted on August 5, 2017 of securities fraud and conspiracy in what prosecutors said amounted to a Ponzi scheme. Shkreli called the charges "a witch hunt of epic proportions".
During his sentencing on Friday in Brooklyn federal court, Shkreli, 34, broke into tears and pleaded with the judge for leniency.
"I look back and I'm embarrassed and ashamed", he told the court. "I am terribly sorry", he said to his investors, "I lost your trust."
At his trial last year, Shkreli often wore a smirk and was chastised by the judge for his behavior, including for an incident in which he told reporters that the prosecutors on the case were "junior varsity". He also ignored the advice of his lawyer by commenting on the trial via social media and YouTube.
More coverage from:
Submitted via IRC for Runaway1956
Update 5/17/2018: The FDA has now launched the website listing the names of brand name drugs and their makers who have stood in the way of generic drug companies trying to make more affordable alternatives. You can view the list here. It includes notable medications, such as Accutane (for acne), Methadone (used for opioid dependency), and Tracleer (to treat high blood pressure in the lungs). The brand name drug makers to be shamed includes big hitters such as Celgene Corp, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, Gilead Sciences Inc, and Actelion Pharmaceuticals Ltd, now a Johnson & Johnson company. Our original story, published May 16, is unedited below.
The Food and Drug Administration plans this week to effectively begin publicly shaming brand-name drug companies that stand in the way of competitors trying to develop cheaper generic drugs.
FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb told reporters on Monday and Tuesday that the agency will unveil a website on Thursday, May 17 that names names of such companies. More specifically, the website will publicly reveal the identity of 50 branded drugs and their makers that have blocked generic development. The website will also be updated "on a continuous basis" to list additional names.
In fielding questions from reporters, Gottlieb denied that the effort was a form of public shaming. "I don't think this is publicly shaming," Gottlieb said, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. "I think this is providing transparency in situations where we see certain obstacles to timely generic entry."
Health systems representing around 500 U.S. hospitals have formed a not-for-profit pharmaceutical manufacturer called Civica Rx. The drugs will be cheap, and the CEO will not receive a paycheck:
A drugmaking venture backed by major U.S. hospitals has picked a chief executive officer, hastening the arrival of another threat to generic pharmaceutical manufacturers.
Martin VanTrieste, 58 and a former top executive at biotechnology giant Amgen Inc., will run the organization, a not-for-profit called Civica Rx. Dan Liljenquist, 44 and an Intermountain Healthcare executive, will be chairman. Health systems with a total of about 500 hospitals -- including Intermountain, HCA Healthcare Inc., Mayo Clinic and Catholic Health Initiatives -- will help govern the venture, alongside several philanthropies.
Civica Rx will work to combat drug shortages and skyrocketing prices for some treatments given in hospitals by manufacturing generics or contracting with other firms to make them. Generic drugmakers have faced scrutiny for raising the prices of certain older drugs, particularly when hospitals lack alternatives. The supply chain for such treatments has also been vulnerable to disruptions, leading to persistent shortages.
"Civica Rx will first seek to stabilize the supply of essential generic medications administered in hospitals," the group said in a statement. "The initiative will also result in lower costs and more predictable supplies of essential generic medicines."
The venture, announced by Intermountain in January, said it plans to have its first products ready by as early as next year. It's focused on a group of 14 drugs given in hospitals, but a spokesman for the group declined to identify them. Liljenquist said that the drugs are in categories such as pain relief, antipsychotics, antibiotics and cardiovascular treatments, including drugs that are stocked on so-called crash carts used in emergencies.
Also at NPR, CNBC, The Washington Post, and Forbes.
Related: The Cheerios Theory of Branded Medicine
Mylan Overcharged U.S. Government on EpiPens
Martin Shkreli Points Fingers at Other Pharmaceutical Companies
Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and JPMorgan Chase to Offer Their Own Health Care to U.S. Employees
Analysts Question Whether Curing Patients is a Sustainable Business Model
FDA Has Named Names of Pharma Companies Blocking Cheaper Generics [Updated]
His early release reflects good behavior and completion of rehabilitation programs
Infamous ex-pharmaceutical executive Martin Shkreli has been released from federal prison after serving less than five years of a seven-year sentence for a securities and wire fraud conviction. He is now moving into a US Bureau of Prisons halfway house at an undisclosed location in New York until September 14, 2022.
Shkreli was convicted in August 2017 on two counts of securities fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud in connection to what federal prosecutors called a Ponzi-like scheme involving two hedge funds Shkreli managed. In March 2018, a federal judge sentenced him to seven years, which he was serving in minimum security federal prison in Allenwood, Pennsylvania.
His early release—slightly more than four years after his sentencing—reflects time shaved off for good behavior in prison, plus completion of education and rehabilitation programs, according to CNBC. It also includes a credit for the roughly six months he spent in jail prior to his sentencing.
Previously on SoylentNews:
United States Sells Unique Wu-Tang Clan Album Forfeited by Martin Shkreli
Judge Denies Shkreli's "Delusional Self-Aggrandizing" Plea to Get Out of Jail
Shkreli Stays in Jail; Infamous Ex-Pharma CEO Quickly Loses Appeal
Martin Shkreli Accused of Running Business From Prison With a Smuggled Smartphone
Sobbing Martin Shkreli Sentenced to 7 Years in Prison for Defrauding Investors
Britain Fines Pfizer Record £84.2m for 2600% Drug Price Hike
Daraprim Price Lowered in Response to Outrage
Cost of Daraprim Medication Raised by Over 50 Times
In an effort to avoid being held in contempt of court, former pharmaceutical executive and convicted fraudster Martin Shkreli made an eyebrow-raising argument to a federal judge Friday, stating that his company Druglike, which he previously described as a "drug discovery software platform," was not engaged in drug discovery. As such, he argued he is not in violation of his sweeping lifetime ban from the pharmaceutical industry.
Last month, the Federal Trade Commission and seven states urged a federal judge in New York to hold Shkreli in contempt for allegedly failing to cooperate with an investigation into whether he violated the ban. The FTC said Shkreli failed to turn over requested documents related to Druglike and sit for an interview on the matter.
In the filing Friday, Shkreli claims that he responded to the FTC's requests "promptly and in good faith."
Previously:
FTC: Shkreli May Have Violated Lifetime Pharma Ban, Should be Held in Contempt
Martin Shkreli Launches Blockchain-Based Drug Discovery Platform
Shkreli Released From Prison to Halfway House After Serving <5 of 7 Years
Martin Shkreli Accused of Running Business From Prison With a Smuggled Smartphone
Sobbing Martin Shkreli Sentenced to 7 Years in Prison for Defrauding Investors
Martin Shkreli's $5 Million Bail Revoked for Facebook Post Seeking Hillary Clinton's Hair
Martin Shkreli Lists Unreleased Wu-Tang Clan Album on eBay
Martin Shkreli Convicted of Securities Fraud Charges, Optimistic About Sentencing
Martin Shkreli Points Fingers at Other Pharmaceutical Companies
Related:
"Pure and Deadly Greed": Lawmakers Slam Pfizer's 400% Price Hike on COVID Shots
U.S. Hospitals Band Together to Form Civica Rx, a Non-Profit Pharmaceutical Company
FDA Has Named Names of Pharma Companies Blocking Cheaper Generics [Updated]
EpiPen Maker is Facing Shareholder Backlash
Mylan Overcharged U.S. Government on EpiPens
Drug Firm Offers $1 Version of $750 Turing Pharmaceuticals Pill
Infamous ex-pharmaceutical executive Martin Shkreli is yet again in trouble with the Federal Trade Commission, which announced today that the convicted fraudster has failed to cooperate with the commission's investigation into whether he violated his lifetime ban from the pharmaceutical industry by starting a company last year called "Druglike, Inc."
[...]
At the center of the dispute is whether Shkreli's co-founding of Druglike runs afoul of his lifetime ban from the pharmaceutical industry, which was in response to Shkreli's infamous move to raise the price of the cheap, life-saving anti-parasitic drug, Daraprim, from $17.50 a pill to $750 a pill in 2015.
[...]
The FTC also noted in its court filing that Shkreli has so far failed to pay any of the $64.6 million in disgorgement he was ordered to pay alongside his lifetime ban.
Previously:
Martin Shkreli Launches Blockchain-Based Drug Discovery Platform
Martin Shkreli Accused of Running Business From Prison With a Smuggled Smartphone
Sobbing Martin Shkreli Sentenced to 7 Years in Prison for Defrauding Investors
Martin Shkreli's $5 Million Bail Revoked for Facebook Post Seeking Hillary Clinton's Hair
Martin Shkreli Lists Unreleased Wu-Tang Clan Album on eBay
Martin Shkreli Convicted of Securities Fraud Charges, Optimistic About Sentencing
Martin Shkreli Points Fingers at Other Pharmaceutical Companies
Related:
U.S. Hospitals Band Together to Form Civica Rx, a Non-Profit Pharmaceutical Company
FDA Has Named Names of Pharma Companies Blocking Cheaper Generics [Updated]
EpiPen Maker is Facing Shareholder Backlash
Mylan Overcharged U.S. Government on EpiPens
Drug Firm Offers $1 Version of $750 Turing Pharmaceuticals Pill
(Score: 4, Insightful) by Runaway1956 on Saturday March 09 2019, @03:54PM (13 children)
whack his pee-pee, and throw his ass into solitary, on bread and water.
The story here is not that Shkrelli is breaking some rules. The story is that the prison is incapable of controlling it's prisoners.
“I have become friends with many school shooters” - Tampon Tim Walz
(Score: 3, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @04:46PM (4 children)
In my country, he is known as a businessman.
(Score: 3, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @06:21PM
Manafort, go back to your cell!
(Score: 1, Flamebait) by darkfeline on Sunday March 10 2019, @12:59AM (2 children)
To be fair, most organized criminals make much better businessmen than actual so-called businessmen.
Join the SDF Public Access UNIX System today!
(Score: 1, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 10 2019, @01:54AM (1 child)
Of course they do. It's a lot easier to be successful when you can literally "take out" your competition.
(Score: 2) by captain normal on Sunday March 10 2019, @03:41AM
Or, just make them an offer they can't refuse.
The Musk/Trump interview appears to have been hacked, but not a DDOS hack...more like A Distributed Denial of Reality.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @05:08PM (2 children)
Bread and water? LOL. In solitary, they mush everything on your tray into a ball and give you a foodball, with no tray, and no cup you can use to splash the guards with.
(Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @05:20PM (1 child)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nutraloaf [wikipedia.org]
(Score: 2) by DannyB on Sunday March 10 2019, @11:03PM
after reading the Wikipedia article . . .
My Nutraloaf recipie:
* Meat: spam
* vegitable: some kind of super hot eye watering peppers
* grains: ???
The server will be down for replacement of vacuum tubes, belts, worn parts and lubrication of gears and bearings.
(Score: 1) by fustakrakich on Saturday March 09 2019, @06:33PM
No, it's not about being "incapable" by any means. The prison system is run like any other business.
La politica e i criminali sono la stessa cosa..
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @11:11PM (1 child)
Yes. I'm wondering whether or not it's been confiscated and if not, why not, and how soon will the people who are responsible for confiscating it be sacked so that it can be confiscated.
Only problem with whacking his pee-pee is that there is no money to fund transgender surgeries!
(Score: 2) by DannyB on Sunday March 10 2019, @10:59PM
You misunderstand whacking it. (And I do not mean masturbation.) Rather, hitting it with, say, a night stick.
If you to the surgery you suggest, then you remove the effectiveness of this helpful conditioning treatment.
The server will be down for replacement of vacuum tubes, belts, worn parts and lubrication of gears and bearings.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @11:15PM
nah. how about FCI Florence.
That could possibly send a message. But when he gets out I'm sure he, Michael Miliken, Andrew Wiederhorn et al will get together and plot their revenge on us.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 10 2019, @02:58AM
Not from a visitor, because prisoners are strip searched after visits.
Not through the mail, because mail is strictly sorted.
We can't be certain that a correctional officer wasn't his supplier but it's the way to bet.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @04:51PM (13 children)
Did they intend on putting him in jail, to take down his company when he can't issue orders?
And since they failed it means he had some counter plans?
Or is it just that they are bitter their plan failed and they can't buy a whole company for cheap?
(Score: 2) by RandomFactor on Saturday March 09 2019, @05:29PM (10 children)
This brings up an interesting discussion.
When in jail, should you be able to do anything with your worldly goods or possessions? Arrange for their management and disposition? Or just learn to be a lawyer and hope your car is where you left it?
В «Правде» нет известий, в «Известиях» нет правды
(Score: 2, Insightful) by legont on Saturday March 09 2019, @07:55PM (4 children)
Mein Kampf was written in jail. Lenin - a professional writer - was also very productive while incarcerated.
The US is different though. He should have been raped by aids positive minorities.
"Wealth is the relentless enemy of understanding" - John Kenneth Galbraith.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @07:59PM
The profound boredom that comes with incarceration is extremely stimulating to the imagination. Those without imagination go crazy in jail.
(Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 10 2019, @03:03AM (2 children)
I would not wish prison rape on someone.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_of_Rodney_Hulin [wikipedia.org]
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 10 2019, @06:37AM (1 child)
Thank you - fucking Christ Almighty, prison rape seems to be the ultimate punishment fantasy in the USA. Grow the fuck up morans.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 10 2019, @04:59PM
In the US we need to hate someone, and criminals are easy prey. It's not that we wish rape upon them, we wish "the gay" upon them so we can continue hating them for more than their legal transgressions. We're nothing is not means spirited.
(Score: 3, Disagree) by edIII on Saturday March 09 2019, @09:14PM (4 children)
Of course you should. I don't think that incarceration stops you from being able to sign contracts and conduct business, unless the sentencing agreement (or whatever it is called) specifically barred those activities. Similar to a hacker being told he/she cannot operate a computer for 10 years.
Absent some sort of specific constraints on his behavior, he can conduct whatever business he wants to from behind bars. You can sign book deals, movie deals, whatever you want. What may be interesting though, is that there may be some claim then to the profits of the company to pay off any restitution fees imposed by the court. That may be civil court too.
The headline is a little misleading. What he is being accused of it is not running businesses, but using a contraband smartphone. He's fully capable of writing and receiving letters from prison, which will be reviewed of course, and that would let him conduct business just fine. The fact he is doing it on contraband and an unmonitored channel is the real story. Not surprising though, shithead MBA hellbound execufucks need covert channels. Everytime there is a dump we get to see them for the filth they are. Dupont knowingly poisoning a family, that cunt of a pharmacy exec that knew people were dying but pushed cherry picked results, Wall Street in 2008, Sony Entertainment execs being sweet gentlemen, etc.
People we want to prevent running businesses from prison are typically organized crime members, but I can see how you can confuse Corporate America with them :)
Technically, lunchtime is at any moment. It's just a wave function.
(Score: 3, Informative) by mendax on Saturday March 09 2019, @10:04PM (2 children)
Strictly speaking, you are not allowed to run a business from prison. These rules are in place to prevent gang-related business being conducted. You are allowed, however, to sign contracts for some purposes, such as signing a book deal. Prisoners are allowed to write books to their heart's content.
It's really quite a simple choice: Life, Death, or Los Angeles.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 10 2019, @03:00AM (1 child)
Correct, at least for the Federal system. I've read the BOP regulations. There are some things forbidden without staff authorization, but running a business is never allowed.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 10 2019, @05:30AM
So what happens with a privately held business? Can the employees do whatever they want? Could the incarcerated owner have the police evict those employees ignoring his orders from the premises? Can he have his lawyer handle policy enforcement?
(Score: 2) by MostCynical on Saturday March 09 2019, @10:47PM
https://dealbook.nytimes.com/2010/09/15/can-you-run-a-company-from-jail/ [nytimes.com]
https://www.khq.com/news/can-an-inmate-run-a-business-from-prison/article_57bf4358-d820-5ac1-b006-c037315f05f5.html [khq.com]
"I guess once you start doubting, there's no end to it." -Batou, Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex
(Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @11:16PM (1 child)
For that matter, what is the current price of Daraprim? Did it come down?
If high-school kids in Australia can replicate a $750 drug for $2, why is it still so expensive to buy? [qz.com]
Looks like our work is not done here. We've got some more capitalists to put behind bars.
(Score: 2) by wisnoskij on Monday March 11 2019, @02:00AM
Because the kids did not have sell their product to anyone so 99% of the costs of a drug: FDA, Marketing, Bottling, RnD, giving away free product, were not included in their $2 cost.
(Score: 0, Troll) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @07:26PM (1 child)
can you hear me now?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 10 2019, @12:13AM
He probably licked it clean after it came out of Goatse's chamber
(Score: 1, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 09 2019, @10:10PM (1 child)
All the supervillains have them these days, I hear.
(Score: 2) by Fluffeh on Tuesday March 12 2019, @12:04AM
Yes, but they also reply to the right article.
*sips coffee*
This is not the article you are looking for.
*waves hand*