LOS ANGELES
– A former executive at StyleHaul Inc., a digital marketing company that
represents “influencers” on YouTube and Instagram, has been arrested pursuant
to a federal grand jury indictment charging him with embezzling $22 million
from his employer and using the stolen money for buy-ins at professional poker
tournaments, crypto-currency investing, and other personal expenses.
Dennis
Blieden, 29, formerly of Santa Monica and now residing in Nevada, was taken
into federal custody yesterday in Las Vegas. The indictment, which a federal
grand jury returned on Tuesday and was unsealed today, charges him with 11
counts of wire fraud, one count of aggravated identity theft, and two
forfeiture counts.
Blieden made
his initial court appearance today in United States District Court in Las
Vegas, and he will be arraigned on the indictment in Los Angeles at a later
date.
According to
the indictment, between October 2015 and March 2019, Blieden was the controller
and vice president of accounting and finance for StyleHaul, a digital company
once based in Hollywood, but which relocated to London in April. In this role,
Blieden had control over the company’s bank accounts, and allegedly abused this
authority to wire the company’s money to his personal bank accounts.
Blieden is
charged with disguising his fraudulent behavior in various ways, including
creating a fictitious lease in May 2018 for the rental of a condominium in
Rosarito Beach, Mexico, which bore a forged signature of a StyleHaul executive.
The
indictment further alleges that Blieden illicitly transferred $230,000 of
StyleHaul’s funds for his own personal use by falsely representing that the
condominium was being rented for business purposes for StyleHaul’s clients and
employees. Blieden also created fictitious wire transfer letters purportedly
from Western Union to make it falsely appear that he had caused wire transfers
from StyleHaul to a client to pay money due to the client, the indictment
alleges.
Blieden, who
has entered and won professional poker tournaments, also frequently engaged in
online gambling with crypto-currency he purchased with embezzled money,
according to the government’s motion requesting detention in this case. During
the course of the alleged scheme, Blieden used money he stole from his employer
to write $1,204,000 in personal checks to poker players, $1,134,956 was used to
pay off his credit cards, and $8,473,734 was transferred to Blieden’s
crypto-currency accounts, according to court documents.
Shortly
before his dismissal from StyleHaul, on February 21 and 22, Blieden entered
into two poker tournaments, wherein the buy-in amounts were $52,000 and
$103,000, respectively, court papers state.
If convicted
of all charges, Blieden would face a statutory maximum sentence of more than
200 years in federal prison.
An
indictment contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every
defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt.
This case
was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
This matter
is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Valerie L. Makarewicz
of the Major Frauds Section.
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