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A hard-partying Silicon Valley investor has settled charges with the SEC that he bilked clients out of millions of dollars to fund his elaborate shindigs.

Mike Rothenberg — a 34-year-old venture capitalist whose over-the-top parties got spoofed on HBO’s “Silicon Valley” — “misappropriated millions of dollars” from his venture funds, “including an estimated $7 million of excess fees,” according to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Rothenberg agreed to a five-year brokerage and investment advisory business ban, and settled the charges without admitting or denying the allegations, the SEC said Monday.

In a statement, Rothenberg said he determined that “it would best serve his investors to bring this matter to a close.”

Rothenberg, who was an early investor in SpaceX and stock-trading app Robinhood, used the funds to stage “private parties and events at high-end resorts and Bay Area sporting arenas,” the SEC said.

Rothenberg stole client money to bankroll wine tours of Napa Valley, hot-air balloon rides and luxury boxes at San Francisco Giants and Golden State Warriors games, according to the SEC.

In the high-dollar stunt that sparked the “Silicon Valley” parody, Rothenberg rented out AT&T Park for startup founders to take batting practice on the field, according to a Bloomberg profile from 2015.

Following the settlement, Rothenberg sued Silicon Valley Bank, accusing it of placing $4.25 million in the wrong account through an “unauthorized transaction” which gave the appearance that he had “embezzled” money from the fund.

But while the suit complained that Rothenberg’s reputation was “destroyed” after “having been effectively branded as an embezzler,” it didn’t take issue with allegations about the $7 million in phony investor fees.

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