The Phnom Penh Post

Fyre founder is charged

- Amy B Wang

ONE of the organisers of the disastrous Fyre Festival has been arrested and charged with wire fraud, according to the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York.

Billy McFarland was arrested Friday in New York and accused of making “false representa­tions to investors” in his company, Fyre Media LLC, and in a “luxury” music festival that had been set to take place in the Bahamas over two weekends in April and May.

Acting Manhattan US Attorney Joon Kim said in a statement Friday that McFarland allegedly presented fake documents to induce investors to put over a million dollars into his company.

“William McFarland promised a ‘life changing’ music festival but in actuality delivered a disaster,” Kim said. “Thanks to the investigat­ive efforts of the FBI, McFarland will now have to answer for his crimes.”

McFarland, 25, appeared Saturday before a judge and was released from jail on a $300,000 bond, according to Variety.

McFarland had promoted the Fyre Festival as “MORE THAN JUST A MUSIC FESTIVAL”, promising not only live music, but luxurious accommodat­ions, gourmet meals and mingling with celebritie­s on a private island in the Bahamas. In exchange, festivalgo­ers paid anywhere from $450 to $250,000 to attend. Expectatio­ns were high. Instead, the festival collapsed in spectacula­r, public fashion. When attendees arrived in the Exumas, a group of islands belonging to the Bahamas, they discovered that the luxury accommodat­ions were actually disaster-relief tents on the beach, some still not set up. Cheese sandwiches made up the “gourmet meals”, and festival organisers seemed to be equally in the dark, sometimes literally, about what was supposed to happen. Blink-182, one of the festival’s headliners, had pulled out at the last minute.

On social media, the collapse of the “elite” festival was unfurled live for all to see under #fyrefestiv­al, #dumpsterfy­re and other unprintabl­e hashtags.

In April, McFarland and his Fyre Festival co-founder, the rapper Ja Rule, had defended their intentions amid accusation­s that they had set out to defraud people.

“We were a little naive in thinking for the first time we could do this ourselves,” McFarland told Rolling Stone then. “Next year, we will definitely start earlier. The reality is, we weren’t experience­d enough to keep up.”

But the US Attorney’s Office’s complaint against McFarland alleges that the entreprene­ur deliberate­ly orchestrat­ed a scheme to defraud investors, including at least two people who had invested about $1.2 million in Fyre Media.

One way McFarland did so was by artificial­ly inflating his company’s revenue and income, telling investors that Fyre Media had earned “millions of dollars of revenue” from “thousands of artist bookings” from July 2016 until April 2017, according to the US Attorney’s Office.

“In reality, during that approximat­e time period, Fyre Media earned less than $60,000 in revenue from approximat­ely 60 artist bookings,” the attorney’s office said.

The complaint alleges that, with at least one investor, McFarland backed up his claims to vast sums of money with a doctored brokerage statement that made it appear he owned shares of a stock worth more than $2.5 million. In reality, the shares he owned in that stock were valued at less than $1,500, the complaint states.

“McFarland truly put on a show, misreprese­nting the financial status of his businesses in order to rake in lucrative investment deals,” William Sweeney, assistant director-incharge of the FBI’s New York field office, said in a statement. “In the end, the very public failure of the Fyre Festival signalled that something just wasn’t right.”

Wire fraud carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

Representa­tives for Fyre Media referred questions to an attorney, Stacey Richman, who did not respond to email request for comment Saturday.

The New York Times on Friday described Richman as an attorney for Ja Rule, whose real name is Jeffrey Atkins.

“Mr Atkins is not under arrest and we don’t perceive him to be a subject of this investigat­ion,” Richman told the newspaper.

 ?? SCOTT MCINTYRE/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Trash, discarded materials and remnants of the failed Fyre Festival remain on the festival site in Exuma, Bahamas, May 14.
SCOTT MCINTYRE/THE NEW YORK TIMES Trash, discarded materials and remnants of the failed Fyre Festival remain on the festival site in Exuma, Bahamas, May 14.

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