After an attendee of a Juggalo Valentine's Day show in Lansing downloaded the entire discography of Three 6 Mafia on the venue's Wi-Fi, the bar was hit with 500 Digital Millennium Copyright Act notices.

Scott Bell, the talent buyer for the Lansing-based bar, tweeted out a photo of the 500 copyright notices and spoke to Vice's music blog, Noisey. He told Vice he originally thought the package containing the violations was a new router from Comcast, but turned out to be "500 pages of the same DMCA notice."

Mac’s Bar got served with 500 digital millennium act violations today. Because some juggalo downloaded Three Six Mafias entire discography on our WiFi. Each paper is a song/ 1 violation. 🔥 pic.twitter.com/xjKSxDcISX — Scotty Bell (@SkottyBell) February 23, 2018

"But yeah, we did some detective work and the date lines up with the same night that I had a local Juggalo Valentine's Day hip-hop show," he told the outlet, before saying he might frame some of the notices on the wall. "Each violation occurred between 9:40 and 10:30 PM, so what appears to have happened is that somebody was torrenting or downloading from the Mac's Wi-Fi.

"Someone must have gotten the Wi-Fi password or the DJ got it from the bartender. Apparently, they needed to download all of Three 6 Mafia's discography because every single piece of paper is a Three 6 Mafia song, without exception. From there they also downloaded Young Buck's Straight Outta Cashville, which is also a classic."

Bell told Vice that he is sure he can figure out who the culprit was, and even specifically points to the bar's sound guy, "cause they'd need a laptop." He added that he should probably offer whoever downloaded the music his Spotify password, so they don't download 30 years worth of music on their Wi-Fi again.

As for what happens next, Bell said the bar will "absolutely" continue to book Juggalo shows and that they're going to change the internet password to the number "3" and then "6."