Dennis Blieden

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Dennis Blieden has had a fair bit of success on the tournament poker trail, but his reputation is now marred by his crimes. He embezzled the astonishing sum of $22 million to fund his poker play and other personal expenses. Find out all about this case and the possible punishment that awaits Blieden by reading our reporting of the incident. Poker pro Dennis Blieden recently pleaded guilty to the charges of one count of aggravated identity theft and one count of wire fraud after stealing more than $22 million from his former employers. He admitted that he used these funds to bankroll his cryptocurrency and poker playing ventures. Dennis Blieden has pleaded guilty to aggravated identity theft and wire fraud. The 30-year-old professional poker player and tech exec had been accused of embezzling over $22m from his former employer, StyleHaul.

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Disgraced poker player Dennis Blieden has pleaded guilty to embezzling more than $22 million from his former employers then using the stolen funds to purchase cryptocurrency.

Formerly of Santa Monica but now a Cincinnati resident, 30-year-old Blieden held his hands up and pleaded guilty to one count of aggravated identity theft and one count of wire fraud. The US Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California has warned Blieden faces the statutory maximum sentence of 22 years in federal prison. He has been detained until his sentencing hearing on March 20.

Blieden was the vice president of accounting and finance, and controller of StyleHaul, a digital company formerly based in Hollywood but that relocated to London earlier this year.

The court heard Blieden has control over the company’s bank accounts and abused his position to wire company funds to his personal bank account. Blieden funded his cryptocurrency account with the stolen money.

Huge Sums Paid to Poker Players, Credit cards, and Cryptocurrency Sites

According to court documents, the thefts occurred between October 2015 and March 2019. A staggering $8,473,734 was transferred to Blieden’s cryptocurrency accounts, with some of those accounts used to fund Blieden’s online gambling.

A further $1,204,000 was written in personal checks to poker players, with an additional $1,134,956 used to pay off his credit card debts.

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Dennis Blieden

Bleiden made fraudulent entries into the accounting records of StyleHaul in order to conceal his embezzlement scheme. Those entries were made to look like legitimate company expenses and authorized payments to StyleHaul clients. Other entries were made to look like the transfers to Blieden’s personal accounts were “equity” draws the company owed him.

Furthermore, Blieden falsified wire transfer letters claiming to be from Western Union. These were designed to appear Blieden made wire transfers from StyleHaul to money the company owed clients.

As Blieden’s stealing continued to spiral out of control, he created a fictitious lease for the rental of a condominium in Rosarito Beach, Mexico, in May 2018. Blieden admitted forging the signature of a fellow StyleHaul executive to push the lease through.

The plea agreement entered by Blieden saw him admit transferring $230,000 of StyleHaul’s funds after pretending the condo was being rented to StyleHaul’s employees and clients for business purposed. Instead, Blieden pocketed the money. It is this falsifying of the executive’s signature that has landed Blieden with an aggravated identity theft charge.

Blieden Funds His Poker Playing; Banks Seven-Figure Prize

Dennis Blieden Attorney

Court papers also revealed that on February 21 and 22, shortly before Blieden was dismissed from his StyleHaul job, he entered two poker tournaments. The paper claims the buy-in amounts were $52,000 and $103,000 respectively.

On February 24, Blieden also entered the $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em WPT L.A. Poker Classic Championship. He outlasted 492-opponents, including defeating British star Toby Lewis heads-up, to secure the $1 million first-place prize.

The figures of $52,000 and $103,000 may not be accurate because if Blieden was in Los Angeles for the L.A. Poker Classic, the only tournaments running on those days were a $1,100 buy-in event on February 21 and a $5,250 buy-in event on February 22. This would mean he had to re-enter 46 times in the former and 18 times in the latter, which seems extremely unlikely.

Dennis Blieden Wikipedia

No other tournaments listed on The Hendon Mob results page give any indication as to what tournaments Blieden listed in his plea agreement.

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Blieden continued playing poker right up to being arrested. He cashed in the $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em Bounty event at this year’s World Series of Poker for $1,603. Blieden also finished 17th from 536-entrants in the $10,300 partypoker LIVE MILLIONS Vegas event for a $35,000 score.

Dennis Blieden Cincinnati Ohio

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