The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fake concert promoter gets nearly 4 years in prison

Ill. man scammed clients, took their deposits for self.

- By Bradley Hineman

An Illinois man who falsely claimed to represent bigname entertaine­rs, including musicians like Migos, Lil Yachty and Lil Uzi Vert, and duped clients out of hundreds of thousands of dollars, was sentenced Friday in Atlanta to serve nearly four years in federal prison.

U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg sentenced Octaveon Woods of Decatur, Ill., to spend three years and 10 months in prison, followed by three years of supervised release. He was also ordered to pay restitutio­n in the amount of $879,718 or less. An exact amount will be determined in the next two weeks.

Woods addressed the court at his sentencing and apologized to the victims, his family and the judicial system for his actions.

Woods created and operated businesses to swindle dozens of victims out of money for concerts and comedy shows that never happened, prosecutor­s said. The victims included student groups at Emory University and the University of Missouri.

Woods crafted a profession­al-looking website and drafted complex contracts. He also used aliases to communicat­e, making clients think that the agency was a multi-person organizati­on. He operated the scheme for years, at least as early as 2015, prosecutor­s said.

Woods would have clients wire him 50 percent of the booking cost as a deposit. When the performanc­e didn’t happen and clients demanded a refund, Woods would direct them to a bogus attorney and have them fill out additional paperwork. After receiving the money, Woods would transfer it to separate accounts and retrieve it as cash.

Woods pleaded guilty in April to wire fraud. He was released on bond in February but was arrested in May for violating bond conditions.

He was still operating his scheme up until the point of his arrest, prosecutor­s said.

When Woods met with a probation officer in February, he gave them false informatio­n about his employment, prosecutor­s said.

Woods said he was self-employed and worked with the National Artist Agency before he was discharged for “fraudulent conduct.” But prosecutor­s said that’s one of the companies he created and that he had no legitimate employment.

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