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Lou Pearlman, Disgraced Creator of 'NSync and Backstreet Boys, Dies

Pearlman was sentenced to 25 years in 2008 for a $300 million Ponzi scheme that wiped out investors.
Lou Pearlman
In this Oct. 27, 2006, file photo, Lou Pearlman poses outside his office's at Church Street Station in Orlando, Fla.JOHN RAOUX / ASSOCIATED PRESS

Lou Pearlman, the band boy mogul who launched the hit groups Backstreet Boys and 'NSync but was later sentenced to prison for a $300 million Ponzi and bank fraud scheme has died, the Federal Bureau of Prisons said on its website.

Federal inmate records show that Pearlman, 62, died Friday. No other inmates named Louis Pearlman appear in the federal prisons database.

Pearlman was sentenced to 25 years in prison in 2008 after being convicted of swindling investors and banks in the scheme that went on for two decades. At least $200 million of the more than $300 million wrapped up in the scam was from investors, according to court records.

Lou Pearlman with Aaron Carter
Record impresario Lou Perlman and singer Aaron Carter at T.J. Martell 'Family' Day' Indoor Carnival Benefit in New York City on March 6, 2005.Evan Agostini / Getty Images

A cause of death was not listed in federal records. Pearlman’s attorney argued at the time of sentencing, when Pearlman was 53 years old, that he had "some significant health conditions," according to the transcripts.

Pearlman pleaded guilty under a plea agreement to federal charges of conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States, money laundering and presenting or using a false claim in a bankruptcy proceeding.

Some of the musicians once managed by Pearlman expressed mixed feelings Saturday night.

"He might not have been a stand up businessman, but I wouldn't be doing what I love today [without] his influence," former 'NSync member Lance Bass said on Twitter.

Chris Kirkpatrick, founding member of the hit group, said he had "mixed emotions right now."

Pearlman was convicted after having convinced individual investors and banks to invest millions of dollars in two phony companies purported to be in the airline business — Transcontinental Airlines Travel Services Inc. and Transcontinental Airlines Inc. — going back to the 1980s. The companies "existed only on paper," court records say.

Victims who lost millions or hundreds of thousands of dollars in the scam told the court at sentencing how Pearlman ruined their lives.

One woman said she lost half her retirement savings and was living on Social Security. A widow described her 87-year-old husband breaking down in tears after learning they'd been scammed, according to court transcripts.

Pearlman won investors' confidence with fake financial statements created by a fictitious accounting firm.