Federal prosecutors don’t want a judge to free Fyre Festival scammer Billy McFarland from prison due to the coronavirus pandemic — and cited an exclusive Post interview in which he said he wasn’t scared of getting sick.
Earlier this month, McFarland’s lawyers asked Judge Naomi Buchwald for his early release to home confinement — just two weeks after he told a Post reporter on a prison call that he wasn’t worried about contracting COVID-19.
He added that elderly people who are at greatest medical risk should get priority.
“The reason for the defendant’s lack of concern about catching coronavirus is obvious: he is not among the inmates who are at the greatest medical risk of experiencing more dire complications from COVID-19,” wrote Assistant US Attorney Kristy Greenberg in a motion filed Tuesday.
McFarland is currently at FCI Elkton in Ohio, where he’s serving a six-year sentence for a $26 million fraud related to the disastrous 2017 Bahamian music festival.
The prosecutor questioned the 28-year-old’s claims of asthma, extreme allergies, breathing issues and an alleged heart attack while in prison. She argues that McFarland presented no documentation to support his medical ailments. There is no reference to any heart issues let alone a cardiac event in his prison medical records, Greenberg wrote in the filing.