Meet the party-loving brothers behind ‘UK Fyre Festival’ who ran $800m empire into the ground before 'disappearing act' | The Sun
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THE poster promised it would be “an up close and personal” event with Justin Bieber – so it’s no wonder fans were happy to pay over the odds to get their hands on tickets.
And with this unique intimate access to mega stars like Justin, the British founders of party startup company Pollen saw their business valued at £632million last April.
But just four months later the company went bust, seemingly overnight, owing staff, creditors and shareholders an estimated £78m – including £150,000 to a private jet charter firm.
Now a new BBC Three documentary – Crashed: $800m Festival Fail – reveals how Pollen reportedly left staff and customers millions of pounds out of pocket – with the shocking case dubbed the 'British Fyre Festival'.
It has found an estimated 15,000 customers were charged double – and some triple – for events, with the unauthorised transactions totalling around £2.5million.
Not only that, the film has accessed internal documents that appear to suggest this was done manually by a senior employee at Pollen.
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There are also claims Liam Negus-Fancey, who founded Pollen with brother Callum, married Jim Davidson's daughter at a lavish Ibiza ceremony and charged £50,000 in expenses to the company – including his wedding photographer bill – just days after the company laid off 200 staff.
Callum, who appears to be the driving force behind the company, was 17 and midway through his A-Levels when he dropped out of school to start running events, selling music festival tickets from his car.
His earlier business, called Let's Go Crazy, saw him run all-night raves aimed at teenagers, but a BBC London News investigation revealed there was alleged drug use at some of the events.
The brothers, who have since appeared to mysteriously disappear and shut down much of their social media, were in their 20s when they launched the start-up – initially known as Verve in 2014.
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