Fyre Festival founder in solitary confinement after prison podcast

NEW YORK • Billy McFarland, the disgraced entrepreneur behind the notorious Fyre Festival and a current federal inmate, has been placed in solitary confinement after he participated in a newly released podcast about his crimes.

McFarland, 28, who is serving six years for fraud in an Ohio prison, can be heard discussing his various high jinks and their aftermath in detail from a prison phone on a show titled Dumpster Fyre, which premiered last Tuesday.

McFarland's lawyer said he has been in 23-hours-a-day solitary confinement since last week, after a trailer for the podcast was released online.

He may remain there for up to 90 days or more, pending an unspecified investigation by the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

"We believe the investigation stems from his participation in the podcast and the photographs that were taken and used in the trailer, which were all properly taken," said the lawyer, Mr Jason Russo.

"We don't believe he's violated any rule or regulation and there can't possibly be anything else. He's been a model prisoner there."

McFarland is being held at FCI Elkton in Lisbon, Ohio, where Mr Russo said inmates are permitted to use the phones, and that all calls are recorded and screened by the prison.

As for the photos of McFarland inside, which have been posted on an Instagram account that bills itself as being "managed by Billy's team", Mr Russo said inmates are permitted to use disposable cameras to take photos, and that those, too, are screened before they can be kept or mailed out.

Podcasting from within prison is not unheard of. Ear Hustle, produced at San Quentin State Prison, was created in 2017 by an inmate at the time, along with the help of an outside volunteer, while Uncuffed tells the stories of people incarcerated in California from the inside.

On the first episode of Dumpster Fyre, in which he is interviewed by podcaster Jordan Harbinger, McFarland says inspiration for the podcast came last year, during his previous three-month stint in solitary confinement, which he called a "much-needed confrontation with reality" and the "hardest but most impactful period of my life".

"Solitary led to this forced reflection on my mistakes and the people I hurt," he said, noting that any proceeds he earns from Dumpster Fyre would go towards the US$26 million (S$35.3 million) in restitution he owes his victims.

"The first thing I need to do is take responsibility for all of my actions," he said, promising to follow "all the rules" and give "complete transparency".

The Fyre Festival, which was the subject of duelling documentaries last year, was supposed to be a luxury music festival with glamorous accommodation and top-tier talent, but never happened after guests arrived to find a shambolic set-up on the island of Great Exuma in the Bahamas in April 2017.

While out on bail after initially pleading guilty to two counts of wire fraud, McFarland was charged with two more counts of fraud related to a new company that prosecutors said sold fake tickets to fashion, music and sports events and was said to have cost at least 30 victims a minimum of about US$150,000.

On the podcast, McFarland said: "I was desperate and thought I could dig myself out of the hole."

He is scheduled to be released on Aug 30, 2023, his lawyer said.

NYTIMES

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on October 26, 2020, with the headline Fyre Festival founder in solitary confinement after prison podcast. Subscribe