Crime & Safety

Martin Shkreli's $2M Wu-Tang Album Could Be Seized By The Feds

Federal prosecutors say they want Martin Shkreli's Wu-Tang Clan album after he was convicted of securities fraud.

NEW YORK, NY — The infamous "pharma bro" Martin Shkreli might lose his one-of-a-kind Wu-Tang Clan album, according to court documents filed on Thursday night.

Shkreli, who was convicted in August of securities fraud, needs to pay up at least $7.36 million, prosecutors argued in documents filed in federal court in Brooklyn. Some of that money might come from his Wu-Tang Clan album, the recording he famously purchased in 2015 for a reported $2 million.

Prosecutors estimate the $7.36 million is a "a conservative computation of the proceeds Shkreli personally obtained as a result of his three different securities fraud crimes of conviction," they told Judge Kiyo Matsumoto, a federal judge in Brooklyn.

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Prosecutors suggested that the Wu-Tang album, along with other valuable assets owned by Shkreli, be forfeited in "partial satisfaction of his forfeiture money judgment." Other assets identified by the feds include a Picasso painting, a Lil Wayne album and an Enigma machine, along with all of Shkreli’s shares in Turing Pharmaceuticals, the biotech company Shkreli started.

Shkreli is believed to have bought the Wu-Tang album, of which only one copy was made, for at least $2 million. The legendary New York-based rap group decided to auction off the album to the highest bidder in 2015, under the condition that the owner never release the music commercially.

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Shkreli's extravagant purchase came to light shortly after he catapulted himself to infamy by hiking up the price of a life-saving drug by 5,000 percent. Shkreli has remained unrepentant about his unequivocal quest to make as much money for shareholders as possible.

Shkreli's securities fraud conviction was unrelated to his price gouging. He hasn't yet been sentenced but faces up to 20 years in prison. Shkreli remains behind bars after his bail was revoked in September when he offered $5,000 to anyone who could bring him a lock of Hillary Clinton's hair – considered by a judge to be a threat.

Image credit: Drew Angerer / Staff / Getty Images News

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