Director Carl Rinsch indicted and charged for stealing $11 million from Netflix

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Carl Rinsch is a director with one feature film credit, the 2013 box office and critical bomb 47 Ronin. He’s also done a music video for Swedish House Mafia, some commercials, and worked for a time at Ridley Scott’s production company. I’d call that a promising resume for someone still making their way up in Hollywood. Yet somehow, in 2018 Rinsch had every major studio and streamer wooing him to accept their millions for Conquest, a sci-fi series he was pitching. Netflix won, laying out $44 million to fund the seven remaining episodes Rinsch had planned. Filming began in 2019 and Rinsch blew through the budget and all production deadlines. By late 2019/early 2020, Rinsch said he’d only completed one episode and needed more money to continue, and Netflix reluctantly gave him another $11 million. Cut to this week, where Rinsch was indicted and charged with fraud and money laundering for taking Netflix’s $11 million and spending it on Rolls Royces and, believe it or not, mattresses, among other things

According to the court records, Rinsch pitched the show … in January 2018 to Netflix executives including Cindy Holland, who was then the VP in charge of original content, and who left the company in 2020. … Netflix agreed to invest $44 million to acquire the series and produce the first season. A schedule was drawn up that called for several months of filming in Kenya, Mexico, Romania, Berlin, Hungary and Uruguay in 2019.

…Rinsch then set about expanding the script, and demanded an additional $11 million to complete the first season, according to the ruling. Hoping to salvage the project, Netflix agreed to pay the money in March 2020, the ruling states.

The COVID-19 pandemic promptly intervened, shutting down production worldwide. In June 2020, Rinsch met at a hotel with Holland and another Netflix executive to give an update.

“Rinsch spent a large portion of the meeting sharing various theories he had been developing about COVID, the universe, interconnectivity, genders, God, higher callings and reproduction,” the ruling states. “He did not focus on ‘Conquest.’”

Unsettled, the Netflix executives concluded he did not intend to finish the show. … That fall, Netflix decided to write off the cost of the series.

According to the indictment, Rinsch had quickly transferred most of the $11 million to his brokerage account, where he promptly lost about half of it by speculating on investments such as call options on a biopharmaceutical company and put options on an S&P 500 ETF. At the time he was still reassuring Netflix that the show was “awesome and moving forward really well,” the indictment states.

According to the indictment, he used the remaining funds to invest in cryptocurrency in early 2021, which resulted in a windfall. The arbitration ruling states that Rinsch spent lavishly on various items in late 2021, claiming the purchases were needed for the second season of the show, which Netflix had not ordered. He was also worried that the IRS would tax him on the money if it was not spent, the ruling states.

The purchases included $638,000 on luxury mattresses; $295,000 on luxury bedding and linens; $180,000 on kitchen appliances; $5.4 million on furniture; and $1.68 million on two Rolls Royces, the arbitrator’s ruling states. According to the indictment, he bought five Rolls Royces and one Ferrari for $2.4 million. He also paid his rent on his home in Spain, and legal bills to pursue Netflix for breach of contract in arbitration.

The grand jury indictment, unsealed Tuesday, accuses Rinsch of wire fraud, money laundering and five counts of using illicit funds in a transaction. Rinsch faces the potential of many years in prison, and the government is also seeking to forfeit his assets.

[From Variety]

The New York Times had an article about this case in 2023 that fills in a lot about Rinsch — things like, he grew up in California, but liked to tell people he grew up in Africa and that his father was a spy (paging Hilaria Baldwin). Here’s what I’m dying to know: how many luxury mattresses does $638,000 buy? And furthermore, what did Rinsch DO with these mattresses? Are they all for him, and if so how many homes does he have, or did he make one huge square by laying them all out up against each other? Or wait, was something stuffed in these mattresses?! These are the life mysteries that haunt my psyche, folks.

Also, I really can’t let this one go without comment: “A schedule was drawn up that called for several months of filming in Kenya, Mexico, Romania, Berlin, Hungary and Uruguay in 2019.” Why all country names except for Germany? Unless there’s a country called Berlin I’m unaware of…

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16 Responses to “Director Carl Rinsch indicted and charged for stealing $11 million from Netflix”

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  1. Whatever says:

    He used some of the money on “legal bills to pursue Netflix for breach of contract in arbitration?” He used Netflix’s money to SUE NETFLIX?!? 🤣 Honestly, you almost have to admire the nerve.

    • AlpineWitch says:

      Yep!! 🤣🤣
      I imagine he went to those meetings with Netflix execs using one of the Rolls Royces he bought with their money?? 🤣🤣

      This guy should have been arrested after making that dreadful samurai movies called 47 ronin (which lost money but white men always get a million chances anyway!)

  2. Bumblebee says:

    He should have spent some of that money on a hair stylist and tailor. Because that man-bun and too small suit does not scream competent grifter.

  3. Myself says:

    It’s possible there was a single mattress (like Hastens) that cost that much alone. Usually they’re quite a bit cheaper (under $100K) but I think they have special options that can up the price substantially.

  4. Jab says:

    When women joke we want the confidence of a mediocre man THIS is what we mean. He wasted how many millions then Netflix gave him 11 MORE!!! My god-If this was a female director you think it would have gone this far? Ok back to getting ready for my job that I’m giving 110% of myself so I don’t get fired-ugh

    • NoHope says:

      I was coming here to say just this–how crazy it is that this guy, looking like the epitome of Mister Director Creator, was able to do this when so many great people–women–with great projects are banging on Netflix’s closed door. This guy barely had a body of work, but he is tall, white, attractive, right aged, has a man bun and confidence in his ideas and his power.

      I want to see women be able to get meetings with Netflix and get projects green-lit. Whenever I go through their stand up comedy queue I get so mad, it’s about 90% men.

      C’mon Netflix!

    • bisynaptic says:

      🎯

  5. Side Eye says:

    This is a documentary I would watch on Netflix! This is absolutely bonkers. It’s so funny that you mention Hillaria Baldwin because that’s immediately who came to mind! To think we missed out on those African and Spanish Rinshitos bebes…

  6. Peaceful Warrior says:

    Dude sounds like he was high af. Some of that $$ had to have gone up his nose.

    • Kiki says:

      Came here to say alot of coke residue will be on those mattresses. Also though I love how he put some money aside to sue the people he allegedly stole money from…🤣I do feel really bad any crew/cast that got screwed out of work

  7. FYI says:

    So Netflix execs gave him an extra $11mil, and THEN took a meeting to check status. At that meeting, he’s babbling about the galaxy and genders.
    .
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    I’m just baffled at these people who get piles and piles of money even though they’re high on K or something. HOW??

  8. KS says:

    Also, his wife left him when he started acting crazy (reportedly he was abusing stimulants) so a lot of that spending was probably an attempt to hide assets.

  9. martha says:

    Crystal meth?

  10. Arhus says:

    Obsession with luxury is a disease