A Norwegian man who admitted tricking an investor out of $US1 million in a fake deal to promote Justin Bieber in Scandinavia has been sentenced to 11 years in jail, US prosecutors say.
Wahleed Ahmed was also ordered to repay the $US1 million, said the US Attorney's office in Los Angeles and the FBI.
Ahmed presented himself as a successful entrepreneur from Norway who had invented solar-powered phone covers, and he promised the victim would make $US9 million in profit in three months.
The 22-year-old used photos of famous dignitaries including the Crown Prince of Norway, Queen Rania of Jordan and others, and claimed to have multimillion-dollar contracts with large telecommunications firms, to lend credibility to his scheme.
In August 2012, Ahmed convinced the victim to invest $US1 million to secure concert venues for the Justin Bieber Tour, using fake documents and websites he had bought with domain names suggesting they were part of the scheme.
He was charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and and pleaded guilty in March 2013, admitting he had "taken the victim investor's money knowing that there was no contract for Justin Bieber tours and that the victim would lose his money".
As well as serving 132 months in jail, he was ordered to make an immediate restitution payment of $US1,001,505.50 ($A1.11 million). Judge Philip S. Gutierrez ordered the prison term to be followed by three years of supervised release.
