Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 29
Carl Rinsch Gets 2.5 Years for Defrauding Netflix of $11 Million
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 29

Carl Rinsch Gets 2.5 Years for Defrauding Netflix of $11 Million

3 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jun 29

Summary

  • Two and a half years in prison was imposed on director Carl Erik Rinsch after his conviction for federal fraud and money laundering tied to $11 million in Netflix production funds.
  • Prosecutors said Netflix advanced the money to finish the sci-fi series then called White Horse, but Rinsch moved it into a personal account, lost about half through investments within months and diverted more into cryptocurrency.
  • Lavish spending helped underpin the case: prosecutors said he used the funds on Rolls-Royce cars, luxury mattresses and other personal purchases instead of delivering the single season Netflix had approved.
  • Judge Jay Rakoff also ordered three years of supervised release, $11 million in forfeitures and a $700 fine; Rinsch apologized in court and said he accepted responsibility.
  • The sentence closes a case over a roughly $55 million Netflix deal for an unfinished show, with Rinsch—best known for 47 Ronin—having argued at trial that the spending was a misunderstanding during the pandemic.

Insights

Is one director's $11M fraud a bizarre crime, or a warning sign of a broken Hollywood financing system?
Keanu Reeves called him a visionary. What caused the director who defrauded Netflix of $11M to completely self-destruct?
After a director burned $11M on crypto and Rolls-Royces, how have streaming services changed the rules for funding big projects?