This latest legal action follows at least six other lawsuits against the Fyre Festival team. The first was a $100 million fraud suit filed in California federal court by celebrity lawyer Mark Geragos. Ben Meiselas, an attorney at Geragos’ law firm, told Pitchfork that while about 300 ticket buyers have signed up for the suit, that probably represents more than 1,000 people, because of the way tickets were sold. He said it remained unclear how many people bought tickets overall or how many attendees arrived on the island.

When asked about the extent of Ja Rule’s role in the Fyre organization, Meiselas said, “Not to be a hater on Ja Rule, I don’t think the name itself in a contemporary sense carries a great deal of weight. He leveraged his connections [and] basically promoted this as a rebirth of his career. Venture capitalists really bought in and liked that American comeback story, which is how it was being pitched.”

On Sunday, Geragos’ firm filed documents claiming Fyre Festival was “merely a front for a massive financial fraud akin to a Ponzi scheme.” A number of unidentified investors in Fyre Media were also added as defendants. The company was allegedly being valued at between $90 million and $105 million, Bloomberg reports. Meiselas told Pitchfork that many of Fyre Media’s investors were affiliated with major banks, venture capital firms, and corporations.

“It kinds of reminds me of a politician, I won’t name who, who says, ‘It’s not about this,’ and then it’s always about that,” Meiselas told Pitchfork. “The moment they tweeted, ‘This is not a scam’—I think it was Ja Rule who tweeted it—then you go, OK, so why was it you were valuing a company that had no assets at all at $90 million?”

Representatives for the parties their case against Fyre Festival didn’t immediately respond to Pitchfork’s requests for comment.

Find all of Pitchfork’s Fyre coverage here, and read “Searching for Answers in Fyre Festival’s Viral Disaster” over on the Pitch.

Find the full text of the latest lawsuit below.