Martin Hill Back to Prison

Martin Shkreli, former director of the Turing pharmaceutical company, will remain in prison at the order of the Court of Case, which concluded that Albanian-American labelled as America's most hated man for the extreme increase in the price of an anti-medical drug AIDS had violated the bail pact. The book has posted [...]
Martin Shkreli, former director of the Turing pharmaceutical company, will remain in prison at the order of the Court of Case, which concluded that Albanian-American labelled as America's most hated man for the extreme increase in the price of an anti-medical drug AIDS had violated the bail pact. The stock posted a Facebook message that, according to the judge, posed a threat to former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.
Just a month ago, the 34-year-old was found guilty of fraud by investors in two financial funds administered by him, but until the final conviction declaration from mid-January, he was given parole. In the post that she would leave behind bars, Shkrely offered $5,000 for anyone who would pull Clinton out a hair on the tour she was making to promote a new book.
His defence lawyers tried to argue that the message was nothing more than a political satire. But Judge Kyyo Matsumoto did not look at him in a mood and said the offer could be taken seriously by opponents of the former Democrat candidate. Such a thing is not protected by the First Amendment, the judge said. Government authorities had stated that the message on Facebook had alerted members of the secret service protecting the former First Lady.












