47 Ronin director faces wire fraud charges over alleged crypto spending

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Carl Erik Rinsch, the popular director of the Hollywood blockbuster 47 Ronin, has been convicted of wire fraud and money laundering tied to misappropriating funds provided by streaming platform Netflix for a science fiction series. In the news announced by the US Attorney’s Office of New York, Rinsch was found guilty.

In the report, the 47 Ronin director was found guilty of one count of wire fraud and one count of money laundering, with each of the counts carrying a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. Prosecutors were also able to secure a conviction on five counts of engaging in monetary transactions using property derived from unlawful activity. Each count is also carrying a maximum sentence of 10 years, with his sentencing already scheduled for April 17, 2026.

47 Ronin director convicted of wire fraud, money laundering

According to the indictment that was unsealed in a Manhattan federal court on March 18, the 47 Ronin director reached an agreement with streaming platform Netflix in 2018 to produce episodes of a science fiction series called White Horse. Both parties agreed on payments, with Netflix paying $44 million for the initial episodes of the series, a payment that was made between 2018 and 2019.

After spending the initial budget provided by Netflix, the streaming platform agreed to pay an additional $11 million, transferring the funds to him in March 2020 to complete the project. Federal prosecutors noted that while the payment for the series was completed, Rinsch refused to spend the additional budget on White House, holding off on the completion of the series.

Prosecutors mentioned that within days of receiving the additional budget, Rinsch moved the money through several bank accounts, with the funds ending up in a personal brokerage account. The funds were then used to make several purchases, with the 47 Ronin director specifically focusing on digital assets. “His trading was unsuccessful, and within two months after receiving the additional funds, Rinsch had lost more than half of them,” the US Attorney’s Office stated.

Rinsch spent additional funds on crypto

The indictment noted that even after losing more than half of the $11 million, the 47 Ronin director did not spend the remaining funds on White Horse. Instead, he used the funds to purchase digital assets, personal expenses, and luxury items. These included at least $1.7 million on credit card bills, around $3.3 million on furniture, antiques, and mattresses. He also purchased a Swiss watch worth $387,000, and spent $2.4 million on five Rolls-Royces and a red Ferrari.

Speaking on the conviction, United States Attorney Jay Clayton mentioned that Rinsch betrayed the trust of the other party in the business, spending the funds meant for the production of a TV show by gambling part of it on stock options and crypto transactions. “Today’s conviction shows that when someone steals from investors, we will follow the money and hold them accountable,” he added.

Rinsch, a native of California, could be looking at a total of 90 days maximum in prison. The Maximum sentences in cases like these are prescribed by Congress, but the sentencing of any defendant will remain up to the judge. Meanwhile, Rinsch’s attorney argued that this verdict could set a precedent that would allow contractual and creative disputes between artists and financial backers to result in federal fraud charges.

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