The promoter behind a failed music festival in the Bahamas has been arrested in New York on a wire fraud charge.
Billy McFarland was charged with scheming to defraud investors in his company, Fyre Media, and Fyre Festival that was supposed to take place on the island of Exuma over two weekends in April and May.
McFarland, 25, is expected to appear before a federal magistrate judge on Saturday and faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison if convicted.
The Fyre Festival was billed as an ultra-luxurious event with headliners including rockers Blink-182 and the hip-hop act Migos.
The founder of the disastrous Fyre Festival has been arrested and charged with fraud https://t.co/hk5dMcYsKf pic.twitter.com/Fx4oICYRYr
— BuzzFeed News (@BuzzFeedNews) July 1, 2017
But performers bowed out and organisers were forced to cancel the show.
Acting US Attorney Joon Kim said McFarland presented fake documents to induce investors to put more than one million dollars into his company and the failed festival and "promised a 'life changing' music festival but in actuality delivered a disaster".
McFarland and his partner, rapper Ja Rule, already face more than a dozen lawsuits filed by ticket buyers and investors in the festival.
An action filed in May in Los Angeles said the festival was "nothing more than a get-rich-quick scam" akin to a Ponzi scheme.
Ja Rule, whose real name is Jeffrey Atkins, has not been arrested.
Prosecutors allege the founder of the disastrous #FyreFestival used false information for a .2 million investment https://t.co/Ph0dS4s2dU pic.twitter.com/4AvVCAdG7b
— CBS Mornings (@CBSMornings) July 1, 2017