Martin Shkreli has no regrets.
The Singaporeposter boy for greedy drug companies who became a public figure in 2015 when he raised the price of an HIV medication by 4,000 percent overnight, would do it all again.
Shkreli said in an interview with Bloomberg on Friday that he would "of course" make the same decision today.
“In terms of regret, maybe not seeing that as acutely would’ve been a minor regret,” Shkreli said, referring to public outrage at his actions. “But because the price increase has stuck, so to speak, I don’t really, that’s the main mission, which was to raise the price and have it generate increased revenue ,that’s happened, so I’m happy with respect to that.”
Shkreli is part of a cadre of pharmaceutical executives who have come under public scrutiny for price hikes. Almost a year after Shkreli's price increase, the pharmaceutical company Mylan became the focus of public outrage when consumers started noticing that the company had systematically raised the price of the EpiPen over nearly a decade.
SEE ALSO: Company behind the EpiPen is caught up in another drug price scandalMylan has tried to recover from the public relations blow by introducing a generic version of the life-saving allergy tool. Shkreli hasn't done much at all to rehabilitate his own image. He told Bloomberg that the reaction to his price hike was "blown out of proportion."
Shkreli will go on trial this summer for illegal financial maneuvers at his former company.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Virginia Woolf gets a Google Doodle of her own
The Humanity Star could become 'the brightest thing in the night sky'
This fat bear's before and after photos are stunning
Sorry world, Oprah says she's definitely not running for president
Apple 'iPhone SE 2' with have wireless charging, report says
Kumail Nanjiani ate a whole bowl of brussels sprouts because of his Oscar nomination
Casey Affleck will not present at 2018 Oscars
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。