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The notorious promoter ​who turned rapper Ja Rule’s Fyre Festival ​into a ​disastrous​ money swindle ​pleaded guilty to a second fraud on Thursday — marking two convictions in less than five months.

Wearing a tan prison shirt and navy pants, Billy McFarland pleaded guilty to three counts for a fake ticket-selling scheme he admitted to carrying out while he was on bail for the first fraud.

McFarland, 26, faces as much as 115 years in the slammer when sentenced for both frauds on Sept. 17. But he is expected to serve closer to 11 years to 14 years under a deal he hashed out with the feds.

“McFarland’s fraudulent schemes cost real people real money, and now he faces real time in federal prison for his crimes,” Manhattan US Attorney Geoffrey Berman said.

McFarland also agreed to forfeit $26 million for the first fraud, involving Fyre Festival sponsor Fyre Media.

“Oh my God,” McFarland’s tearful mother said when the judge read the $26 million forfeiture number.

The Short Hills, NJ, native made headlines in April 2017 after the weekend-long music festival he planned with Ja Rule provided none of the models, music or luxury amenities promised to the young, wealthy people he helped lure to the Caribbean.

While on pretrial release for defrauding investors of the company sponsoring the Fyre Festival, McFarland kicked off a second scheme to sell fake tickets to exclusive events, including the 2018 Met Gala and Burning Man.

He also targeted some of the same people duped into attending the Fyre Festival — using a spreadsheet to find the Fyre Festival attendees with the highest salaries, the feds have said.

“Are you pleading guilty because you are in fact guilty?” Judge Naomi Buchwald said.

“Yes, your honor,” he replied.

McFarland blew kisses to a sobbing young blond woman and his parents as he was being led out of the courtroom by US Marshals.