Thank you for your thoughtful reply. We have expressed our current views and can agree to disagree.
I am perhaps a purist in that I try and treat people as I would be treated. I’d rather walk away than take advantage of unsophisticated investors by selling something I know isn’t true.
That Alzheimer drug he bought & made big$ on had failed prior trials. He had his mom (MD), resample the study and eliminate people so that the results looked like there was success. The movie referenced in the thread fills out all the unsavory details. A secretary who marries her married boss should expect him to cheat on her in later years. My expectations of Vivek are similar. Not a man to have with his scissors on your lifeline.
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/4177455/posts
Hmm well I wasn’t aware of all the details so I will look into it further. I just know his business strategy was to pick up these drugs he thought looked promising that the big companies had given up on. If there was fraudulent behavior then show me the relevant court case that proves such.