Business

Will Martin Shkreli have to hand over his $2M Wu-Tang Clan album?

A news conference announcing securities fraud charges against former hedge-fund boss Martin Shkreli took an unusual turn on Thursday with a question about a $2-million copy of a Wu-Tang Clan album he bought in May.

Former hedge fund boss, now facing securities fraud charges, bought the one-of-a-kind album in May

A photo of Martin Shkreli, CEO of New York City-based Turing Pharmaceuticals, from his Twitter feed. (Twitter)

A news conference announcing securities fraud charges against former hedge-fund boss Martin Shkreli took an unusual turn on Thursday with a question about a $2-million copy of a Wu-Tang Clan album he bought in May.

Shkreli, 32, had bragged to Bloomberg Businessweek about buying the only copy of the popular New York-based hip-hop collective's Once Upon a Time in Shaolin, drawing ire from music fans around the world when he said he had no plans to listen to it.

He spent the $2 million to "keep it from people," he said.

Wu-Tang Clan had produced the record as a limited-edition album, which it then put up for auction.

When asked about the rare album on Thursday, U.S. Attorney Robert Capers told reporters: "We're not aware of where he got the funds that he raised for the Wu-Tang Clan album."

Shkreli exits a federal court in New York after being arrested on alleged securities fraud. (Bloomberg)

Capers' comments immediately spurred hopeful posts on social media from music lovers that the album might be forfeited by the Turing chief executive officer during his federal prosecution.

Twitter lit up with reaction to the arrest of Shkreli, who is even more reviled for boosting drug prices than he is for hiding the album. Shkreli's critics used the hashtag #Karma to voice their support for the federal prosecution and hope that the Wu-Tang clan album could be heard across the world.

Responding to questions on social media about the status of the album, the Federal Bureau of Investigation tweeted later on Thursday that it had not yet seized it, or any of Shkreli's assets.

Whether authorities plan to reclaim the album through asset forfeiture in the future was not immediately clear, but Wu-Tang has already distanced themselves from Shkreli.

"The sale of Once Upon a Time in Shaolin was agreed upon in May, well before Martin Shkreli's business practices came to light," said group member RZA, whose fellow Wu-Tang Clan members include Ghostface Killah and Ol' Dirty Bastard. "We decided to give a significant portion of the proceeds to charity."

But even if the album is freed for the people, some on social media have questioned if they'd listen.