Chad Focus Wanted to Be a Rap Mogul. How Much Fraud Would It Take?
The wannabe rapper is currently facing more than 20 years in prison for allegedly stealing money to make music and buy fake fans. Did he dream too big, or not big enough?
by Will Caiger-Smith
Dec 20 2019, 12:21pm
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Image via Getty Images
For someone potentially facing more than 20 years in prison, Chad Arrington sounded remarkably upbeat when I finally spoke to him earlier this week.
Calling from a local gym in Baltimore, where he's been working since a judge modified the conditions of his house arrest earlier this year, he thanked me for my interest in his story but declined to comment on his ongoing court case. "I'm just happy to be alive, man," he said, in the same energetic, earnest tone as every one of the videos I've pored over since he was indicted by a grand jury earlier this year.
According to the indictment, Arrington made more than $4 million of unauthorized purchases on his company credit card as he attempted to launch a rap career alongside his day job as a search engine optimization specialist. The title track of his debut album—promoted with a giant billboard in Times Square—was called "Get To The Money."
Federal prosecutors say Arrington used the card to fund the production of music under his alter ego "Chad Focus," and to buy Spotify streams, YouTube views, Instagram followers and outdoor advertising to boost his profile. He's also accused of using it to bankroll a lavish lifestyle, blowing money on jewelry, hotels, luxury cars, and tickets to his own concerts.
On top of that, he allegedly funneled purchases to co-conspirators in return for cash kickbacks, and embezzled thousands of dollars to finance his own startups, including a bike-, scooter-, and hoverboard-sharing business. To conceal this illicit spending from his employer, he falsified billing statements and forged his supervisor's signature, prosecutors say.
The would-be rap star and business mogul faces charges of wire fraud, conspiracy and aggravated identity theft; for the wire fraud alone, the maximum sentence is 20 years. Despite all the money he supposedly threw at them, his music career and business ventures never really took off, and as he awaits trial he's banned from making music about the case—the one thing that finally made him famous.
The indictment reads like a parody of the contemporary grifter canon. The sheer scale of Arrington's alleged spending evokes the genre's epics: the Instagram-fueled folly of Fyre Festival, or the high-society confidence games of Anna Delvey. But the everyday reality of his schemes calls to mind more provincial tales, like Caroline Calloway's over-promising on social media, or Brooklyn rap crew Pop Out Boyz, whose members were caught up in a credit card fraud bust back in 2016. In the story of Chad Focus, these two ends of the scamming spectrum meet in a kind of singularity: one man's quixotic quest for success in a booming but still deeply troubled post-crisis economy.
Arrington was duly ridiculed when the indictment emerged in June. Social media bloomed with facepalm emojis as people discovered his content for the first time, while on YouTube, Revolt TV's popular Breakfast Club show labeled him 'Donkey of the Day.' "If you spent $4 million on your music career and I haven't heard of you, you must be trash," laughed one presenter. Even if you felt bad for him, it was hard to take issue with the mockery, if only because Arrington all but delivered the punchlines himself. Just one example: a bizarre skit halfway through the 11-minute music video for "Get To The Money," which ends with him lecturing a cash-strapped friend to "live within your means."
But dig through this online library of entrepreneurial evangelism, and beneath all the bluster you'll find kernels of truth about our shiny new digital economy: About the opportunities it promises, the contradictions it fosters, and the inequality it perpetuates. In an otherwise cringeworthy MTV Cribs-style video titled "Who Is Chad Focus Arrington?" one line strikes a poignant note: "I've been on the internet my entire life," Arrington says. "I've seen so many people use the internet to make money and to create a fortune, and I was like, 'Why not me?'"
Chad Arrington is 31 years old, and lives in Randallstown, Maryland. He received a bachelor's degree in 2009 from McDaniel College in Carroll County, where he used to play basketball: He's listed on the roster for McDaniel's "Green Terror" team and his Instagram account features a picture of a framed collection of articles about its successes. Police records show he's been cited for offenses ranging from traffic infractions to assault, as well as "phone misuse" and the distribution of intimate images, but he's never been convicted. According to tax records, in 2017 and 2018 the IRS filed liens against him for overdue state and federal taxes totaling $100,000.
The indictment doesn't name the company that provided the corporate card, but at the time of the alleged fraud Arrington was working as a search engine optimization specialist at a company called Money Map Press. Part of sprawling Baltimore-headquartered publishing network Agora Inc—which declined to comment for this article—Money Map Press hawks stock tips and other money-making opportunities to retail investors via online newsletters. It's got a similar tone to many of Agora's other outlets, which Mother Jones once described as "skirt[ing] the line between spammy and scammy"; for example, an email newsletter in which one Agora outlet claimed the Obama administration was blocking a miracle cure that "vaporized" cancer.
It's unclear exactly why or when Arrington decided to pursue music as a side-hustle to this day job, but prosecutors claim the fraudulent purchases began in 2015. Not that his extracurricular activities were limited to music: The first post on his main Instagram account—which is from 2017, and was ostensibly taken in Medellin, Colombia, of all places—is captioned "Focus Music is more than music... it's my whole way of life!" A year later, in a video interview with local Maryland radio host Jay Hill, Arrington explains that his ultimate goal is to create a business empire like one of hip-hop's best-known moguls. "I have a background in marketing, you know, music, communications, sports, and we're basically trying to take that all under one house," he says. "So you're looking at a bunch of young guys from Baltimore trying to replicate what you would see Jay Z do."
Arrington was certainly not short of ideas about how to diversify his business portfolio. As well as listing him as CEO of Focus Music Entertainment, "owner" of the hashtag #focusmadeithappen, and "Billboard artist" @chadfocus, his main Instagram account links to a clothing line named @focuswearofficial, and an account called @smartboardking which appears to be connected to the personal mobility startup mentioned in the indictment. Next to an illustration of Arrington on a hoverboard—his eyes glowing red like some kind of cyborg—the account displays the slogan: "Smartboard the personal transportation device of the future." His main account features pictures of bicycles and scooters too: some of them are regular-looking bikes with Focus branding, while others are electric and occasionally straddled by a female model in photos labeled "The Curves Club."
The core product, though, was the music. Chad Focus released a litany of singles during his short-lived career: alongside "Get To The Money" his discography includes "Get To The Bag," as well as "Cents," "What You Need," and "Drinks On Me." Some of his tracks, like "Curtain Call," barely achieved 500 listens on SoundCloud, while others did serious numbers—"Get To The Money" has 25 million listens, and the official video has 4.4 million views on YouTube. Commercially speaking, his most successful release was "Dance With Me," an auto-tune ballad that at one point graced Billboard's Dance Club chart. Arrington purportedly enlisted T-Pain—whose representatives didn't respond to a request for comment—to appear on remix of the track, which has 4.5 million listens on SoundCloud as of this month.
Confusingly, though, the official video for "Dance With Me" has about 15,000 views on YouTube—far less than you'd expect for a Billboard-charting single—and barely 140 likes. According to industry experts I spoke with, inconsistencies like this are an instant red flag to anyone familiar with music promotion.
Chad Focus seemed to be a rising star. But how much of it was real?

The wannabe rapper is currently facing more than 20 years in prison for allegedly stealing money to make music and buy fake fans. Did he dream too big, or not big enough?
by Will Caiger-Smith
Dec 20 2019, 12:21pm
ShareTweet
Snap
Image via Getty Images
For someone potentially facing more than 20 years in prison, Chad Arrington sounded remarkably upbeat when I finally spoke to him earlier this week.
Calling from a local gym in Baltimore, where he's been working since a judge modified the conditions of his house arrest earlier this year, he thanked me for my interest in his story but declined to comment on his ongoing court case. "I'm just happy to be alive, man," he said, in the same energetic, earnest tone as every one of the videos I've pored over since he was indicted by a grand jury earlier this year.
According to the indictment, Arrington made more than $4 million of unauthorized purchases on his company credit card as he attempted to launch a rap career alongside his day job as a search engine optimization specialist. The title track of his debut album—promoted with a giant billboard in Times Square—was called "Get To The Money."
Federal prosecutors say Arrington used the card to fund the production of music under his alter ego "Chad Focus," and to buy Spotify streams, YouTube views, Instagram followers and outdoor advertising to boost his profile. He's also accused of using it to bankroll a lavish lifestyle, blowing money on jewelry, hotels, luxury cars, and tickets to his own concerts.
On top of that, he allegedly funneled purchases to co-conspirators in return for cash kickbacks, and embezzled thousands of dollars to finance his own startups, including a bike-, scooter-, and hoverboard-sharing business. To conceal this illicit spending from his employer, he falsified billing statements and forged his supervisor's signature, prosecutors say.
The would-be rap star and business mogul faces charges of wire fraud, conspiracy and aggravated identity theft; for the wire fraud alone, the maximum sentence is 20 years. Despite all the money he supposedly threw at them, his music career and business ventures never really took off, and as he awaits trial he's banned from making music about the case—the one thing that finally made him famous.

The indictment reads like a parody of the contemporary grifter canon. The sheer scale of Arrington's alleged spending evokes the genre's epics: the Instagram-fueled folly of Fyre Festival, or the high-society confidence games of Anna Delvey. But the everyday reality of his schemes calls to mind more provincial tales, like Caroline Calloway's over-promising on social media, or Brooklyn rap crew Pop Out Boyz, whose members were caught up in a credit card fraud bust back in 2016. In the story of Chad Focus, these two ends of the scamming spectrum meet in a kind of singularity: one man's quixotic quest for success in a booming but still deeply troubled post-crisis economy.
Arrington was duly ridiculed when the indictment emerged in June. Social media bloomed with facepalm emojis as people discovered his content for the first time, while on YouTube, Revolt TV's popular Breakfast Club show labeled him 'Donkey of the Day.' "If you spent $4 million on your music career and I haven't heard of you, you must be trash," laughed one presenter. Even if you felt bad for him, it was hard to take issue with the mockery, if only because Arrington all but delivered the punchlines himself. Just one example: a bizarre skit halfway through the 11-minute music video for "Get To The Money," which ends with him lecturing a cash-strapped friend to "live within your means."
But dig through this online library of entrepreneurial evangelism, and beneath all the bluster you'll find kernels of truth about our shiny new digital economy: About the opportunities it promises, the contradictions it fosters, and the inequality it perpetuates. In an otherwise cringeworthy MTV Cribs-style video titled "Who Is Chad Focus Arrington?" one line strikes a poignant note: "I've been on the internet my entire life," Arrington says. "I've seen so many people use the internet to make money and to create a fortune, and I was like, 'Why not me?'"
Chad Arrington is 31 years old, and lives in Randallstown, Maryland. He received a bachelor's degree in 2009 from McDaniel College in Carroll County, where he used to play basketball: He's listed on the roster for McDaniel's "Green Terror" team and his Instagram account features a picture of a framed collection of articles about its successes. Police records show he's been cited for offenses ranging from traffic infractions to assault, as well as "phone misuse" and the distribution of intimate images, but he's never been convicted. According to tax records, in 2017 and 2018 the IRS filed liens against him for overdue state and federal taxes totaling $100,000.
The indictment doesn't name the company that provided the corporate card, but at the time of the alleged fraud Arrington was working as a search engine optimization specialist at a company called Money Map Press. Part of sprawling Baltimore-headquartered publishing network Agora Inc—which declined to comment for this article—Money Map Press hawks stock tips and other money-making opportunities to retail investors via online newsletters. It's got a similar tone to many of Agora's other outlets, which Mother Jones once described as "skirt[ing] the line between spammy and scammy"; for example, an email newsletter in which one Agora outlet claimed the Obama administration was blocking a miracle cure that "vaporized" cancer.
It's unclear exactly why or when Arrington decided to pursue music as a side-hustle to this day job, but prosecutors claim the fraudulent purchases began in 2015. Not that his extracurricular activities were limited to music: The first post on his main Instagram account—which is from 2017, and was ostensibly taken in Medellin, Colombia, of all places—is captioned "Focus Music is more than music... it's my whole way of life!" A year later, in a video interview with local Maryland radio host Jay Hill, Arrington explains that his ultimate goal is to create a business empire like one of hip-hop's best-known moguls. "I have a background in marketing, you know, music, communications, sports, and we're basically trying to take that all under one house," he says. "So you're looking at a bunch of young guys from Baltimore trying to replicate what you would see Jay Z do."
Arrington was certainly not short of ideas about how to diversify his business portfolio. As well as listing him as CEO of Focus Music Entertainment, "owner" of the hashtag #focusmadeithappen, and "Billboard artist" @chadfocus, his main Instagram account links to a clothing line named @focuswearofficial, and an account called @smartboardking which appears to be connected to the personal mobility startup mentioned in the indictment. Next to an illustration of Arrington on a hoverboard—his eyes glowing red like some kind of cyborg—the account displays the slogan: "Smartboard the personal transportation device of the future." His main account features pictures of bicycles and scooters too: some of them are regular-looking bikes with Focus branding, while others are electric and occasionally straddled by a female model in photos labeled "The Curves Club."
The core product, though, was the music. Chad Focus released a litany of singles during his short-lived career: alongside "Get To The Money" his discography includes "Get To The Bag," as well as "Cents," "What You Need," and "Drinks On Me." Some of his tracks, like "Curtain Call," barely achieved 500 listens on SoundCloud, while others did serious numbers—"Get To The Money" has 25 million listens, and the official video has 4.4 million views on YouTube. Commercially speaking, his most successful release was "Dance With Me," an auto-tune ballad that at one point graced Billboard's Dance Club chart. Arrington purportedly enlisted T-Pain—whose representatives didn't respond to a request for comment—to appear on remix of the track, which has 4.5 million listens on SoundCloud as of this month.
Confusingly, though, the official video for "Dance With Me" has about 15,000 views on YouTube—far less than you'd expect for a Billboard-charting single—and barely 140 likes. According to industry experts I spoke with, inconsistencies like this are an instant red flag to anyone familiar with music promotion.
Chad Focus seemed to be a rising star. But how much of it was real?
