Pharma Bro Forfeiture: Shkreli May Pay Millions, Lose Legendary Wu Tang Album

Hedge fund manager Martin Shkreli posing with an Enigma machine, a possession he might be forced to sell (Photo: Martin Shkreli / Facebook)

Reviled “Pharma Bro” and securities fraudster Martin Shkreli may have to part with some serious cash—or prized possessions—after U.S. Attorney Bridget M. Rhode requested the courts impose a forfeiture of more than $7.3 million on the shameful son of Sheepshead Bay.

In a schadenfreude-inducing letter, Rhode spells out the potential fines for Shkreli, who was convicted of securities fraud earlier this year.

In a “conservative computation of the proceeds Shkreli personally obtained as a result of his three different securities fraud crimes of conviction,” the recommendation calls for three forfeitures for Shkreli, in amounts pf $2,998,000, $3,403,450 and $960,000 respectively for three different counts of securities fraud.

The grand total would be $7,360,450 for the 34-year old Shkreli.

Of course, the U.S. Attorney was helpful enough to help Shkreli locate his pockets, or at least enumerate a few sources of cash for the hefty fine. The letter identifies specific assets to be forfeited, including the famous “Once Upon a Time In Shaolin,” the only extant copy of a Wu Tang Clan album Shkreli purchases and famously bragged about on social media.

Additionally, there was mention of Shkreli’s copy of what may be “Tha Carter V,” the lost double-album from rap legend Lil Wayne. The album was reportedly set for release before label drama between Wayne and Cash Money co-founder Birdman caused the album to be shelved.

Finally, the letter names a Picasso painting and the Enigma Code Machine, a famed device used to transmit encrypted messages in World War II, as two more assests the price-gouging convict should have to sell in order to pay up.

After the “most hated man in America” rose to prominence increasing the cost of a life-saving drug from $13.50 to $750, then continued a smirking social-media campaign to extend his 15 minutes of infamy, it’s hard to think anyone who’ll feel bad when the courts take his rich boy toys.