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Martin Shkreli resigns as Turing CEO after securities fraud arrest

Martin Shkreli leaves a courthouse after his arraignment in New York, Thursday, Dec. 17, 2015. AP Photo/Seth Wenig

TRENTON, N.J. – Martin Shkreli, the pharmaceutical executive arrested Thursday on charges of securities fraud related to a company he previously ran, has resigned as the head of one of the companies he now runs, Turing Pharmaceuticals.

He’s being replaced on an interim basis by Ron Tilles, who has been chairman of Turing’s board of directors since the company was founded late last year. In a statement Friday, Turing said that Tilles will continue to hold the board chairman position as well.

Tilles has worked at numerous private equity and venture capital firms in the pharmaceutical and medical device industries over the last two decades.

READ MORE: Martin Shkreli arrested, but he still has the Wu-Tang album

Shkreli, a 32-year-old former hedge fund manager, has become “the most hated man in America,” according to some headline writers, for jacking up the price of the only approved drug for a life-saving parasitic infection by 5,000 per cent after acquiring rights to it.

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WATCH: Martin Shkreli, the drug company CEO who inflated the price of a life-saving drug by 5,000 per cent, has been arrested on charges of securities fraud. As Jackson Proskow reports, Shkreli isn’t getting much sympathy.

On Thursday, federal prosecutors said that between 2009 and 2014, Shkreli lost some of his hedge fund investors’ money through bad trades, then looted Retrophin, a pharmaceutical company where he was CEO, for $11 million to pay back his disgruntled clients.

Shkreli, a flagrant self-promoter who recently said he should have hiked the price of anti-parasitic drug Daraprim even more, was paraded in handcuffs by the FBI after his arrest. He pleaded not guilty to charges of securities fraud and conspiracy, which carry a sentence of up to 20 years in prison if he’s convicted. He was released on $5 million bail.

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The news – unrelated to his actions at Turing – delighted patients, advocacy groups and average Joes who found his price-gouging despicable.

READ MORE: Drug maker offers $1 alternative of $750 Turing pill

Turing has offices in New York and Zug, Switzerland.

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Shkreli recently became the CEO of a second company, KaloBios Pharmaceuticals, Inc., based in South San Francisco, California. There’s no word yet on whether he’ll remain at the helm there.

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