Scamfluencers - There’s Something About Martin | Part II
Episode Date: December 12, 2022After breaking a big story about Martin Shkreli for Bloomberg, journalist Christie Smith wants to dig deeper into the man who’s become the face of corporate greed. She begins following him ...everywhere, and she decides he’s not the villain the press has made him out to be. As Martin continues to come under fire for his unhinged antics, Christie’s admiration for him only seems to grow. When their relationship finally comes to light, the damage will already have been done. Please support us by supporting our sponsors!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This is part two of our two-part series.
There's something about Martin.
Even if you think you already know the Martin Screly story, you're definitely going to
want to listen to part one before diving into this one.
Trust me, it'll be worth it.
Sarah, have you ever interviewed somebody and you have ended up like falling in love with
them?
Not like, oh, I respect them or I like them like, I'm in love with you.
Oh, absolutely not.
I mean, you're interviewing someone and there's a very clear purpose for it.
You're trying to get as close to the truth as possible in a very made up scenario.
Yeah, I mean, as you know, I interview a lot of YouTubers and content creators and influencers,
so I feel like it is chemically impossible for me to follow in love with any of them.
That seems fair. Yeah. These are fatal asswords. Well, I have a barn burner for you this week.
It's about the greatest scam of all. Love.
Oh, brother.
In the spring of 2017, Kristi Smyth walks past a statue of Thomas Jefferson perched on the
marble steps of Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism.
She's here for a prestigious fellowship where mid-career business journalists get to take
courses on economics and finance.
She's been on leave from Bloomberg since the fall to focus all of her energy on the fellowship.
And as she walks under the soaring columns and through the door, I imagine that her
heart is racing.
She's heading to class to her feedback on a paper she thinks will take her career to
the next level.
It's a first-person essay all about her personal interactions with the internet's latest viral
villain, Martin Screly.
Christie's hopeful that her professor, Michael Shapiro, will see the potential in her story
for a whole book.
But Michael's response is far from glowing praise.
He's not impressed.
In fact, he's concerned.
He essentially tells her that Martin is dangling access to him as a carrot, and that the more grateful she is
to get exclusives, the more it will hurt her writing.
Christie later says that Michael actively tries
to talk her out of the project, and that Michael warns her
that Martin will, quote, ruin your life.
I've had some pretty great bosses that I've admired in my time.
And if one of them said this to me, it would strike so much fear into my heart.
I would make so many different decisions if somebody said that to me.
It would make my stomach fall through my body.
Right. So obviously this is not the encouragement she was expecting.
Michael is her mentor. He's been a magazine writer for years
and he's written five books.
She looks up to him.
But the icing on top of this shit cake
is that when Christie goes home
and tells her husband about the project,
he takes the side of her professor.
According to Christie, both men who are both named Michael,
tell her that Martin is trying to manipulate her
for his own benefit.
But Christy just doesn't see it.
She feels like there's just something
that people don't understand about Martin,
something special,
and no one is in a position to understand him as well
as she can,
or to understand all the controversy around him.
She knows this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity
for a writer,
so despite her teacher and her husband telling her to drop the Martin story,
Christy doubles down, and that stubbornness is about to bloom into an obsession that will totally consume her life.
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From Wondery, I'm Sachi Cole and I'm Sarah Haggi. And this is ScanFlancers.
In our last episode, we followed a finance bro
from humble beginnings to the peak of fame,
for being a price-gouging asshole with a troll personality.
This week, we're following the journalist who upends her life for the chance to be with Martin,
or at least tell his story for a publishing deal.
Frankly, the driving force is probably a mix of the two.
This episode explores one of the most complex kinds of lies, the ones we tell ourselves when we
fall in love. This is part two of the most complex kinds of lies, the ones we tell ourselves when we fall in love.
This is part two of there's something about Martin.
A few months later in April 2017, Martin invites Christie to watch him give a sold out talk
to the Corporate Finance Club at Princeton University, and he asks if she wants to ride
there with him.
Christy meets Martin at his Murray Hill apartment
and they're picked up by a driver in a black SUV.
Being chauffeur to a fancy Ivy League event
probably feels like heaven to Christy.
She's getting a taste of Martin's life of luxury.
And she thinks the two of them actually have a lot in common.
They both grew up outside of the super rich,
connected circles that run this world,
and this sense of being an outsider is one of the things that bonds them.
When they arrive at Princeton, Kristi later recalls in her self-published memoir that a dean is
there waiting to personally shake their hands. The leaders of the corporate finance club give Martin
a bag of Princeton swag and chocolates. Martin takes the stage and waxes poetic about science, math, and philosophy.
And Christy can't get enough.
In her self-published memoir, she describes the audience as wrapped and charmed by Martin.
And it seems like she is, too.
Martin even gives her a shout out in his presentation.
I have this role opposition to, mostly, because even if you find an honest reporter,
I made friends with one.
Here we have, there's, almost always had this ridiculous point of view and they found
that.
Christy later tells El Magazine that she feels a stir.
Oh my God, the thing that is preemptively upsetting me most about this episode is the sheer amount
of second-hand embarrassment I feel
because forget it being this story,
anyone starting to have feelings for someone
is inherently embarrassing, it's humiliating.
Humiliating.
I just wanna be clear, Sarah.
There is not enough money in the world for me to admit
on the record that I have a crush on anybody.
Never.
Well, after the talk, Christie is spending all of her time focused on writing her book
proposal about Martin.
This project, this person, is taking over Christie's personal and professional life.
And while Christie might be charmed by him, other female journalists are seeing a very different side
of Martin Screly.
About two months later, in late June 2017,
Martin's securities fraud trial is getting started
in a federal district court in Brooklyn.
New York Post Courts reporter Emily Saul
has been assigned to cover it,
and she finds an interesting
angle. She writes a story about how hard it's been to find jurors that don't already know,
and hate Martin. By this point, he's widely loathed for jacking up the price of the
life-saving drug dare-prim, used by pregnant women and HIV-AIDS patients. Oh, and people also hate
him for buying the only copy of the Wu-Tang Clan album once upon a time in Shaolin. Emily writes that one potential juror was over
her calling Martin Screly, quote, the face of corporate greed in America.
She describes Martin, who was in earshot of this comment, as, quote,
looking bored and sucking on his pen.
Every detail about this is making me sick.
Emily also reports that another potential juror was dismissed after she literally on his pen. Every detail about this is making me sick.
Emily also reports that another potential juror was dismissed after she literally required
at the sight of Martin calling him a snake.
Another dismiss juror argued that he couldn't be impartial because Martin simply, quote,
looks like a dick.
Been there.
Yeah, I mean, it's going to be hard to find jurors who don't think the same thing.
Yeah. Well, other dismiss jurors had more personal problems with Martin, like a handful of jurors
who said they lost friends to HIV AIDS and wouldn't be able to square the fact that Martin jacked
up the price of dare prim. Martin doesn't seem to be phased by any of these jurors, but he does take
issue with the New York Post article,
and he goes after the writer.
Just a day after the article runs, he buys domain names for EmilySall.com and for another
female reporter, CNBC's Meg Torell, who's also been covering the trial.
And he tries to sell both domain names for 12 grand, just to fuck with them.
And it gets worse because then he also changes his relationship status on Facebook
to in a relationship with Emily Saul.
He's just so gross.
I mean, like, he's just such a nasty troll.
I mean, this is sort of what would happen if you let the shittiest 12-year-old you know
have way too much money.
And you know, the worst part is that like any response to him
is playing the game he wants you to play.
Like, there kind of is no winning with someone like him.
Correct.
And the harassment gets so bad that Emily actually posts
on Twitter that she is not dating Martin Screlie
just to set the record straight on Martin's bullshit.
And this isn't the first time that Martin has harassed female journalists.
Once earlier, he was suspended from Twitter for creating a harassment campaign against a different journalist, Lauren Ducca.
After she declined his apparent invitation to attend Trump's inauguration with him,
he posted a photo of her and her then-husband,
with his own head photoshopped on top of him to make it look like they were actually cuddling on the couch. He made the photo his profile picture on Twitter and changed his
bio to include the following statement. I have a small crush on Atlorn Dukka. Hope she
doesn't find out. His Twitter account was suspended as a result.
Emily and others might have expected a fellow female journalist like Christy to be disgusted by this repeated harassment.
But then Christy posts a tweet that's just, you know what Sarah, can you just read it?
It says, I don't think he, Martin Screly, would hurt a woman, even a journalist.
Behold, me and the hashtag Wu Tang album.
And then she tags Lauren Duca and the tweet is a photo of the album. And then she tags Lauren Duke, and the tweet is a photo of the album.
And I mean, it's like partly a flex, partly a defense.
And it's like, dude, don't fight your man's battles.
Even a normal guy, don't get involved.
I know.
Like, let him do it himself, right?
In a recording of her memoir,
Chrissy tries to explain her reasoning for sending the tweet.
I started to think if only she knew what Martin was really like in person, a shy, passive
nerd who was never violent. Surely that could make some sort of difference in this whole
unholy exchange. It was a stupid thought, but it stayed firmly planted in my brain.
Girl, don't justify it. You know, this whole episode is like watching a horror movie where you watch somebody walk
towards the shed and you're like, don't go in the shed, you know better.
Yeah, I mean, I guess she doesn't know better.
That's a thing.
Well, I hope she does now, I don't know.
For Martin's part, when asked by business insider about his disturbing pattern of harassing
women on the internet, he gives a truly unhinged response.
Calling them the recipients of a, quote, liberalism subsidy from large media and telecom companies,
only a few notches above the white supremacists we hear so much about these days.
That doesn't make any sense.
He's making several salads made of words.
And despite all of this very real and troubling harassment,
Emily has to keep writing articles about Martin
because he's actively on trial during all of this.
And this behavior is not helping his cause,
or making him seem likable or sympathetic.
But Martin seems determined to stay by his self-righteous worldview,
and it's about to get even worse.
Christy shows up to court every day during Martin's trial.
She tells Elle that she sits on the same side of the courtroom as Martin's internet fans.
She eats lunch with Martin at least once, and a couple of times she even grabs drinks
with him and his defense team at the end of the day.
Yeah, I remember reading that and just being like, how could you be such a season
journalist and make such basic dumb mistakes that just totally invalidate
everything you're doing?
It's so unethical.
It's actually funny.
But despite Christy's support, Martin is still acting out early on in the
trial during the lunch break, he spontaneously
tells a courtroom full of reporters that the prosecution is JV, meaning junior varsity,
and when reporters ask Martin to clarify his comments, Martin's lawyer swathes them away.
You can hear the frustration in his voice in this clip from CNBC.
What you said about the attorney thing to drew your varsity? I really think Martin is not going to be speaking to you guys again if he listens to me.
The judge later bans Martin from talking publicly in or around the courthouse.
Martin's trial is getting closer to a verdict, and instead of playing ball, he's wilding out.
Christie is frustrated watching Martin's scrumes self over this way, but it seems like she just
continues to see the good side in him.
So the trial drags on for five weeks,
and after deliberating for five days, the jury comes to a decision.
Guilty. On three of the eight counts, that includes two counts of securities fraud,
you know, for lying to his investors, and one count of securities fraud conspiracy
for that whole retrofen stock scheme. After the verdict is delivered, Martin addresses the press
and he's as smug and defensive as ever. This was a witch hunt of epic
proportions and maybe they found one or two broomsticks but at the end of the
day we've been acquitted of the most important charges in this case and I'm
delighted to report that. Oh, everything's a witch hunt.
Every time a man references a witch hunt,
they fundamentally don't understand what a witch hunt is.
I think men think a witch hunt is someone
asking you a question.
Yeah.
Well, despite how bad this all looks for Martin,
Christie continues to ride for him.
They're becoming so much more than journalist and subject. They're basically best friends at this point. It's almost like the
worst his reputation gets, the more a Christy defends him. Luckily for him, Martin
is able to post the $5 million bail, so he's still living the free life while he
awaits sentencing, and he's facing up to 20 years in prison. Christy deeply cares
for Martin at this point,
but not even she can get him to stop
making an utter jackass of himself.
About a month later, while he's awaiting sentencing,
Martin publishes two separate Facebook posts.
He's offering $5,000 to anyone who would, quote,
grab a hair from Hillary Clinton during her book tour.
Now you might remember for the last episode that Hillary Clinton called Martin out on Twitter
for the dareprim price hike about two years earlier.
She and a whole lot of other politicians did that.
But there's just something about this particular politician that gets to Martin.
What do you think it is, Sarah?
Do you think it has anything to do with her being a woman?
I don't think it's helping.
Not long after he posts the Facebook updates,
U.S. District Judge Kiyomatsu Moto calls a special hearing.
She looks Martin dead in the eye and basically tells him to suck it.
She calls his comments a solicitation of assault and revokes his bail.
And she gives a pretty scathing comment about it to the Washington Post.
Sarah, can you read it?
Yeah, it says,
the fact that he continues to remain unaware of the inappropriateness of his actions or words
demonstrates to me that he may be creating ongoing risk to the community.
So, Screly's lawyer says that all of this is just a big misunderstanding.
The Facebook posts were all a joke.
He tells reporters, being inappropriate does not make you a danger to the community.
He says things that are stupid.
I don't think stupid makes you violent.
But alas, it's too late.
The damage is done.
From now on, Martin will have to await his sentencing in a prison cell.
You know what the most crazy thing is about this?
If he just didn't have a disease where he couldn't stop posting,
you wouldn't have to be awaiting his sentencing in a prison cell.
He truly did it to himself.
I mean, for some people posting too much is a terminal illness,
and Martin has it.
When the hearing ends, journalists warn Martin's lawyer,
lining up to ask questions,
and Christie is one of those journalists
that Sarah, her questions are just different
than the other reporters.
For example, she asks things like,
does Martin have his glasses
or his anxiety medication?
Is someone looking after his cat?
The lawyer does not have the answers, so Christie says that she texts one of Martin's friends glasses or his anxiety medication is someone looking after his cat.
The lawyer does not have the answers.
So Christy says that she texts one of Martin's friends and a family member to let them know
what's going on.
If someone knew I did this, I would change my identity.
I would change my name, I would change my job, I'd move halfway across the world.
I'd learn a new language, I would change everything fundamentally about myself
and restart.
Yeah, I mean, I would be vermic if I also didn't
remind all of us, she's still married to someone else.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
Well, Martin and Christy seemed to just be self-sabotaging
and Martin cannot stop himself from making things worse.
Christy's probably telling herself
that she's getting close to Martin for the sake of her
book, but she's actually putting her career and her personal life on the line to take
care of him.
And when their relationship finally comes to light, the damage will already have been done. In November 2017, about two months after Martin sent to jail to await sentencing, Christie
gets approved to visit him at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.
She has to make the visit really quick, though, because she's got a couple's counseling
appointment with her husband that same evening,
all the way clear across town on the Upper West Side.
It's a lot of schlepping, but Christy is determined to see Martin.
When Christy arrives at the prison,
she waits in a long security line.
And then, she's led by an officer through a small hallway
to the visitor's room.
In her memoir, she says that the crowded room reeks of microwave pizza and chicken wings.
Prisoners and visitors are packed closely together in plastic chairs facing each other, while
corrections officers rove around like lunch ladies or recess supervisors, quick to admonish
or punish anyone who looks like they're stepping out of line.
Christy says that she's Martin's very first visitor in jail,
but it's kind of strange that she's here. This is where all the prison girlfriends hang out to
see their loved ones, and she's not a loved one. Is she? Christy later tells Elle that she buys
some 30 bucks worth of vending machine snacks.
And she even warms up a little hamburger for him. When Martin comes out, he's wearing a baggy
brown jumpsuit. Christy says she has to show him which chair to sit in. She spoils him with
treats and they catch up on life. They talk about Picasso and her book and his cat, whose name is I swear to God, Trashy. And she just totally loses
track of time.
It's crazy that like, she's in a situation ship with Martin Screly while he's in jail
where it's like, yeah, we talk a lot and like, I feel like we connect, but like, I don't
know if he likes me, likes me.
Okay, well Sarah, I'm gonna make it worse. Are you ready?
Ah!
When the visit with Martin is over,
she realizes that she's late
for the counseling session she has with her husband.
Like, really late.
She grabs an Uber and silently screams at herself
the entire drive.
She knows her husband is gonna be fuming.
And by the time she makes it to the therapy session,
he's reportedly pacing the waiting room, live it,
because she's 52 minutes late for their one hour session.
You know, it's just like, at that point, just lie.
Why rush to the freaking therapy session
when you're 52 minutes late?
Yeah.
At that point, literally any excuse
would be better than the truth.
Yeah. Well, predictably, Christie says that the session is a disaster.
She says that her husband accuses her of being obsessed with her book and with Martin.
And Christie defends herself, saying it's a once in a lifetime project.
She explains to the therapist that she wants to show the other side of Martin Screly,
that he has redeemable qualities. The therapist responds by saying that Hitler was a good painter.
Christy is disgusted.
Martin is not Hitler, she says.
Always a great thing to have to yell out in couples therapy.
And after two more sessions, which Christy says cost 300 bucks each,
Christy and her husband decide to end their marriage of five years.
At the same time, Christy's relationship with Martin is deepening.
It becomes harder and harder to keep their flirty friendship under wraps.
And soon, Christy will be forced to admit her true feelings, to her job, to herself,
and to Martin. And the cost will be unimaginable.
self and to Martin, and the cost will be unimaginable. The months go by and Christy continues to visit Martin and Jail.
She talks to him on the phone and emails him through a special prison email system,
which is monitored.
And all this time, she's still working on her book proposal, even though all the publishers
she sent it to have rejected it.
She tells El Magazine that they all wanted a hit piece on Martin
and she just refused to write one,
but she's hoping to sell film rights to the proposal.
Meanwhile, the prosecutors and Martin's case
are pushing to keep Martin behind bars for 15 years.
In early March of 2018, they submit materials to the court
and an attempt to convince the judge that Martin shows no remorse.
They include email conversations he recently had with someone they call individual one.
And in one email, Martin says that he do, quote, everything and anything to get the lowest
sentence possible.
Christie's hard drops when she realizes that these are her emails, and what she thought
were private email conversations are now a part of the court record.
No offense, how did she not know?
Oh, Sarah, this is fucking amateur hour.
Like, I've never done this type of reporting before, and even I know this.
Well, you kind of have to assume whatever you say to a source could be subpoenaed.
That's like how you have to function.
Anything you could say to anyone can be subpoenaed.
That's how the world works.
Exactly.
Well, Chrissy also knows that when other reporters discover that she's individual one,
they'll realize her reporting was anything but objective.
Chrissy realizes that she can't live this double life anymore.
So she decides to come clean to her editors at Bloomberg
about her relationship with Martin.
And really remarkably Sarah,
her boss has just moved her off the screly beat
and have her report on other court cases instead.
Oh my God.
You know, say she was really taken in
by a very manipulative person,
like even giving the situation the most grace as possible.
She shouldn't be reporting on court cases at all.
She didn't even know her freaking emails could get subpoenaed.
Well, when the sentencing hearing arrives in March 2018, Christy is a ball of nerves.
She tells herself that she's here for book research, but she's also deeply invested in
the outcome.
Martin's lawyer makes a last-ditch effort to defend him.
He says Martin lacks certain social skills, and that sentencing him to 15 years in prison
would be horrific and draconian.
He even reads letters of support from Martin's fellow inmates, who say he's actually been
a positive influence.
And then Martin himself addresses the courtroom.
He says that he's here because of his stupid negligent mistakes
and that he's not the same person he was when he was running MSMB.
He says, quote, there was no government conspiracy to take down Martin Scrowley.
I took down Martin Scrowley.
He seems to express real accountability, maybe for the first time ever.
He says, this is my fault.
I am not a victim here.
The judge announced his Martin's fate.
Seven years in prison.
It's a lighter sentence than the prosecution had argued for,
but it's still an absolute gut punch for Martin and Christy.
Martin's eyes well up with tears.
He begins sobbing in court.
I mean, yeah, that obviously sucks, but it also kind of shows how invincible he thought he was.
Yeah, he didn't think it was going to happen. And I can only imagine that Christie is also totally devastated.
She continues to defend him publicly. In July, several months after the sentencing hearing,
she fires off a tweet suggesting that
his punishment was completely out of proportion.
But her employer, they can't turn a blind eye anymore.
Kristi later tells Elle that her editor at Bloomberg, along with an HR rep, tell her that her behavior
is biased and unprofessional, and Kristi realizes that she's put them in a tough position.
So she decides to quit on the spot.
She's all alone now.
She has no job.
Her marriage has fallen apart,
and her closest ally is a convicted white collar criminal.
She is officially at rock bottom.
And she has to know if these sacrifices have been worth it.
So Christie's about to take the greatest risk of all,
opening up to Martin about her feelings.
After his sentencing, Martin's transferred to a correctional facility in Pennsylvania.
It's almost 200 miles away, and Christie, who tells Elle that she had a lifelong fear of driving, has gotten her driver's license to go visit him.
Christie's decided that she needs to come clean.
She has to tell him that she likes him,
like, like likes him.
She hasn't confessed her feelings yet
and she doesn't even know if they're reciprocated,
but she can't hold it in any longer.
I don't think I've ever seen someone be so down bad, you know?
Sarah, she's down bad.
Like she got her driver's license
to go visit him in prison, like that's a motivation of your life.
I know.
Kristi sits in the prison visitor's room, crowded with inmates and their loved ones.
Security guards walk up and down, making sure no one gets too close. It's not exactly
the most romantic atmosphere, but it doesn't matter.
Christy later tells Elle that she was sitting across from Martin at a table when she
gathers her courage, takes a deep breath, and lays it all on the line.
I love you, she tells him. And Martin says he loves her too.
Christy's so happy, she gets bold and asks if she can kiss him.
And he says yes.
So they officially go to first base.
In the prison visitor room,
under the harsh fluorescent lights
and watchful eye of security guards.
I don't want this to be happening anymore.
I know, honey.
You know.
No.
Well, before long, Martin asks Christy to be his girlfriend.
And pretty soon, she later tells Elle, they're talking marriage and baby names.
After about a year and a half of dating, things are going so well that Christy says that
she decides to freeze her eggs, so she and Martin can start a family when he gets out.
Even better, she says a production company wants to turn her still unpublished book
about Martin into a movie.
It's all happening.
Christie's rebuilding her life with Martin,
but two intractable forces are about to drive
these star cross lovers apart.
Okay, Sarah, it's 2020, and Christie is thinking long
and hard about her relationship with Martin.
He's a public figure, so while no one knows about their relationship status yet,
Christy is convinced that it's just a matter of time. So she decides to spill the tea herself
to Stephanie Clifford. Stephanie is a journalist with El Magazine and she previously covered
Martin's trial for The New York Times, So she knows the story inside and out.
And now she wants the story on Christie.
Yeah, this was a huge day for all of us
when this article came out.
Yeah, I remember doing no work.
Well, unfortunately, when Martin finds out
that Christie is talking to a national magazine
about their relationship, he cuts off
all communication with her.
In her memoir, Christie says that she suspects that he was upset
that she was telling her story.
And she tries everything to get Martin to talk to her again.
Emails, packages, letters,
but all she gets back is radio silence.
Stephanie tells Christy that she reached out to Martin for a quote
and that she heard back from his lawyers.
Christy is just a jumble of emotions.
And whatever it is, she's finally
going to hear something from Martin.
She holds her breath and awkwardly Stephanie tells her.
His message is, Mr. Screly wishes
Miss Mife the best of luck in her future and deverse.
Oh, that is one way to end a relationship.
Yeah.
Christy knows that this is Martin saying goodbye.
She later says that she breaks down and fully cries in front of Stephanie.
Martin never wants to see her again, and she's still completely in love with him.
And things go from bad to worse when Stephanie's article comes out in December 2020.
The headline is, the journalist and the pharma bro. It goes viral, as you and I obviously
remember, and Christy takes a real beating in the press and online. In an opinion piece
for CNN, the writer Jill Philippovic asks, is she delusional or psychologically unwell?
Yeah, that's kind of what a lot of people were
wondering out loud.
It's like, why, how?
Yeah.
And basically, like, how do I make sure
this never happens to anybody near me, ever?
Yes.
Well, a few months later, Kristi
goes on the Tamron Hall show to set the record straight.
I think a lot of people misread some of it.
People interpret it things in their own way. I think everyone's of people misread some of it. People interpret things in their own way.
I think everyone's been sitting in hell watching too much true crime documentaries and so
on.
And a lot of people wanted to see me as a victim.
And I don't think that's what the writer of the article intended at all.
And that certainly isn't what I am.
Then, Tamron Hall asks Christy about the quote everyone can stop thinking about.
When he said he wishes you the best, would you have preferred him to say, oh, and I love
her too?
I, yeah, I would have, but I also knew what I was getting into.
Martin didn't want me to go public.
He was in a situation where he doesn't have any control in the prison.
Christy defends Screly, saying it's a terrifying time
to be in prison during COVID.
And it's just really hard on him right now, you know?
But Christy can't fully let go.
She later admits in her memoir
that she set up a Google alert for his name
to read up on anything about him.
And apparently she keeps in touch with his friends.
Why is she telling people this?
I know, it's she's admitting to a lot of stuff she doesn't have to say.
And by this time, Christie has been leading the US news team for a London-based insurance
publication.
But now, facing so much negative attention from the L article, she decides to leave her
job.
She says she doesn't want the company to suffer because of her.
And her book idea about Martin, it isn't getting much traction from traditional publishers.
So she may have to just publish it herself. Her life has imploded and now she'll have to figure out
how to pick up the pieces.
And I feel like a...
In May of 2022, Martin is released from prison, a little more than four years into his seven-year sentence.
He'll serve the remainder of a sentence in a halfway house in New York.
He's a kind of free man, but while he was locked up, the Federal Trade Commission
ruled against him for price gouging, and they banned him from participating in the pharmaceutical
industry for life. By this time, his old company, Turing, now known as Vieira, pharmaceuticals,
has reached a $40 million settlement with the FTC over its price gouging of Deriprim.
The company has also settled for
$28 million in an antitrust class action case, which allege that Martin and Viera illegally limited
generic competition with Deriprim. So obviously Martin has a lot of baggage and a lot of settlements
to pay, but that doesn't stop him from trying to start over. Maybe he'll meet some new people,
you know?
Just days after he's released from prison, Buzzfeed News reporter and my colleague, Stephanie
McNeil, finds his profile on Bumble.
She tweets, Martin Screly has been out of prison for two minutes and has already apparently
on Bumble.
She includes a snap of his profile picture.
Sarah, can you describe this photo?
Yeah, it kind of looks like a selfie slash mug shot.
He's against a white wall, and he's kind of smirking
his at-perma-smirk in the photo.
Even if he wasn't Martin Screly,
you wouldn't look at that and think like,
all right, I want to get to know this guy.
Yeah, I mean, he doesn't look friendly, I'll say that.
Well, Martin Screly is trying to figure out his next move.
Will anyone swipe on him?
Better yet will anyone hire him?
And will anyone ever trust him again?
It's not clear what kind of future the most hated man in America can look forward to.
Around this time, Kristi finally self-publishes the first chapter of her memoir.
She's titled it, Smirk, how I fell in love with the most hated man in America.
I gotta give it to her, it's a pretty good title.
In the about section of the memoir, Christy writes that Substack is the best way to get her story out there
because, quote, it seeks to disrupt the publishing status quo by reducing the need for gatekeepers, which to me sounds like she just couldn't get a publishing deal.
Yeah, that's exactly what it is.
And well, according to the Sunday Times, as of June of this year, Christie lives alone
with her dog, Jack.
She's dating a horror filmmaker named Humberto, who lives in Jersey.
And every month, she releases new chapters of her e-book online to paid subscribers.
I mean, credit where credits do.
She did pick herself up again in some ways.
She did something.
And over time, Martin appears to forgive Christy
for talking to Elle.
He reaches out and now, surprisingly,
her friends.
And believe it or not, she is still publicly writing
for this dude.
Sarah, take a look at this tweet from June of this year.
It says, if you say all people deserve second chances
and a shot at redemption, except Martin Screly,
or except whomever the internet has decided
to hate at a given moment, you really don't mean that.
Yeah, I mean, somebody must have pissed her off that day
and she just shot this one out.
Yes, but Christie still defends Martin every chance she gets.
And it's unclear where she's working now
or what her future will hold.
What we do know is that there's no greater red flag
in a love story than falling in love
with a notorious, infamous, and super arrogant scam artist.
Okay, Sarah. I mean, in some ways, it might seem that justice was served in the case of Martin
Screly, a person who did things that hurt the most vulnerable population went to jail and then lost
all of his money. But Sarah, do you feel like the Martin Screly story has a satisfying ending?
Not really, because it's just one story of someone doing something bad and getting punished
in an industry where the standard is kind of mistreating people and price gouging and all that
kind of stuff. And it is kind of true that this all happened because he was an asshole.
Yeah, I mean, even when you think about it, like the price of dare-prem, you know, it's not
750 anymore. It's now 790 a pill because he wasn't
really doing anything illegal. He was operating in the exact way that the pharmaceutical industry
in the United States is intended to operate. This is also a scam as you and I have discussed.
That's just about the healthcare industry here. And it's not really a scam if it works
the way that it's designed to work, like it's broken on purpose.
The scam, to me, was that this guy was able to get in a position
where he was able to do anything he did.
Yeah.
And it just makes me wonder, like,
oh my God, how many more people are like him,
but just weren't public about it.
And I will say that, as hated as he was,
he did have a lot of fans, like internet
dude, troll guys, loved Martin Screly. And I think at the end of the day, it doesn't really matter
if people hated him or liked him as far as his influence went because every way of talking about
him gave him power in that moment, you know. There are probably a couple hundred guys like him who
are pulling the same semi legallegal scams and are
getting away with it because they're not public assholes the way he was.
Yeah. It's just that he made so much noise.
Yeah, he could have kept his mouth shut and participated in this price gouging scam that is
quite legal. I am just kind of floored that he fumbled the bag so hard as someone who also
was highly strategic
with how he moved around the world.
Like, who is credit?
He didn't grow up in the world of finance
or having a dad who worked in finance
or like being in a fraternity or anything like that, you know?
So he got himself somewhere
and then he just kind of destroyed it all.
Yeah.
I mean, I feel like it's clear we have very little sympathy
for Martin, but do you feel bad for Christi at all?
I feel for her in the sense that like,
she clearly got sucked into something that ruined her life,
but also she did kind of end up fine in the end.
Maybe she doesn't have a lucrative or prestigious job,
but she's out here living, she's found love.
This is a horrific story that's like about the US health care system, the colossal fraud that is the stock market, and love the three greatest scams in modern life.
Yes, I mean, the scam here is that she fell in love with a waistman.
See, that's the lesson. Never fall in love. And if you have to do it, don't do it with a waste, man.
Also, like, do it privately.
Do it like you're embarrassed appropriately.
Yeah, we all do shameful things for the sake of love.
We've all been down bad.
Yeah.
Not me personally, but no, never.
You know, it happens to everyone,
but most people have the sense to not go public with it, you know?
Well, if you got to be down bad, you better do it in the dark.
That's what I always say.
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Before you go, tell
us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wendry.com slash survey.
This is there's something about Martin Part 2. I'm Sachi Cole. And I'm Sarah Hagi. We use many
sources in our research. A few that were particularly helpful were Stephanie Clifford's article, The Journalist
and the Farmer Bro in Elle magazine, and her reporting on Martin Scarley's trial in the
New York Times.
Laura Pullman's UK Sunday Times article, I left my husband for the most hated man in America
and Christie Smythe's self-published memoir, Smirk.
Rose Cerno wrote this episode, additional writing by Us, Sachi Cole and Sarah Haggi.
Our senior producer is Gen Swan.
Our producer is John Reed.
Our associate producers are Charlotte Miller and Lexi Peary.
Our story editors are Sarah Annie and Alison Windtrop,
and our senior story editor is Rachel B. Doyle.
Sound design is by James Morgan,
fact checking by Sonya Maynard.
Additional audio assistance provided by Adrian Tapia.
Our music supervisor is Scott Velasquez for FreeZonsync.
Our executive producers are Janine Cornelo, Stephanie Gens, and Marshall Lewy.
For Wondry.
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