Among the expenses attributed to the cofounders were thousands spent on vacations to Hawaii, personal rent for their apartments, trips to competitions in Las Vegas, and a visit to a strip club, the lawsuit states.
The brothers, Marcus and Mitch Weller, founded Skully, a motorcycle helmet company, three years ago. After raising close to $2.5 million in an Indiegogo campaign, the company was supposed to be on track to produce an augmented reality motorcycle helmet that had a rear-view camera - sort of like having eyes in the back of your head.
However, the company disintegrated in the last month, after the board forced the brothers out of the company in mid-July. Last Friday, TechCrunch reported that the company they had built was shutting down altogether, despite having raised close to $15 million through a mix of crowdfunding and venture capital. Marcus Weller could not be reached for comment.
The new lawsuit, reported earlier by BuzzFeed, may shed some light on where the money went.
According to the former bookkeeper, Isabelle Faithauer, the brothers treated the company's bank accounts as a "personal piggy bank" and "demanded that Plaintiff conceal the true nature of the expenses by entering them in Skully's books to make it appear that the expenses were incurred for legitimate business reasons, which in fact they were clearly not."
The lawsuit goes on to list 19 examples of the reportedly false expenses, including:
- Rent for a personal apartment in the Marina district of San Francisco, then the subsequent moving and painting expenses when they moved to the Dogpatch
- Restaurant meals and personal groceries charged to the company AMEX card
- A payout of a $80,000 to an unnamed co-founder, which was recorded as a trip to China
- A $13,000 Mai Tai and Extreme tech Challenge in Las Vegas
- A Lamborghini rental during a personal vacation
- A "world tour" trip that included $2,000 for limos in Florida, $2,000 for a strip club, and $2,345 worth of paintings from Hawaii.
A notice on the company's Indiegogo page now alerts those customers who pre-ordered the $1,450 helmet that they'll have to go through bankruptcy court to try to reclaim any money.
"Our team is devastated and deeply saddened that our valued partners, vendors, employees and customers have been negatively affected by what has transpired," the company said in its closing notice. "We realize there are many unanswered questions and that this is a very upsetting situation. We are truly sorry."