A Hollywood director's alleged $11 million fraud against Netflix leads to arrest and charges of wire fraud and money laundering. (AP File)

- Director Carl Erik Rinsch allegedly misused $11 million from Netflix, investing in crypto and buying luxury items instead of completing a show.
- Prosecutors claim Rinsch spent millions on Rolls-Royces, a Ferrari, furniture, and even sued Netflix for more money using the funds.
- The filmmaker faces charges of wire fraud and money laundering, with his indictment filed in New York following his arrest in West Hollywood.
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NEW YORK — A Hollywood writer-director was arrested Tuesday on charges that he swindled $11 million from Netflix for a sci-fi show that never aired, instead steering the cash toward cryptocurrency investments and a series of lavish purchases that included a fleet of Rolls-Royces and a Ferrari.
Carl Erik Rinsch — perhaps best known for directing the film “47 Ronin” — has been charged with wire fraud and money laundering over what federal prosecutors allege was a scheme to defraud the streaming giant.
It is unclear if Rinsch has hired an attorney. Netflix declined to comment.
Netflix’s Initial Investment and Additional Funding
Prosecutors said Netflix had initially paid about $44 million to purchase an unfinished show called “White Horse” from Rinsch, but eventually doled out another $11 million after he said he needed the additional cash to complete the show.
Rather than using the extra money to wrap up production, Rinsch quietly transferred the money to a personal brokerage account, where he made a series of failed investments that lost about half of the $11 million in two months, according to prosecutors.
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Cryptocurrency Investments and Personal Spending
The filmmaker then dumped the rest of the money into the cryptocurrency market, which proved to be a profitable move, with Rinsch eventually transferring the earnings into a personal bank account, according to an indictment.
From there, Rinsch spent about $10 million on personal expenses and luxury items in a spending spree that, according to prosecutors, included about $1.8 million on credit card bills; $1 million on lawyers to sue Netflix for more money; $3.7 million on furniture and antiques; $2.4 million for five Rolls-Royces and one Ferrari; and $652,000 on watches and clothes.
Rinsch, 47, was arrested in West Hollywood and is set to appear in a federal court in California later Tuesday, authorities said. His indictment was filed in New York.
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