
‘Toxic culture': Ex-Ubisoft bosses get suspended jail terms for workplace harassment
Thomas Francois, a former editorial vice president who was also convicted on a charge of attempted sexual assault, received the heaviest sentence of a suspended three-year term.
Among the three defendants, he faced the most damning allegations, including forcing an employee to do a headstand while in a skirt.
During the trial, the court heard that Francois would greet employees using gendered insults, attempt to touch peoples' genitals as part of a so-called 'game', and try to kiss male employees by surprise.
Francois testified during the trial that he 'lacked perspective' during the incidents from 2012 to 2020, when he was aged between 38 and 46, saying he believed at the time that he was 'treating people with respect'.
For his part, former chief creative officer Serge Hascoet, 60, was given an 18-month suspended sentence for psychological harassment and complicity in sexual harassment.
Hascoet told the court he was unaware of the harassment happening outside of his glass office.
But he also instructed his female assistants to perform personal tasks for him not linked to their qualifications, such as picking up his daughter from school or crossing Paris to buy him peanuts.
'It's what we see in films,' said Hascoet during the trial to justify the behaviour.
'Films are not reality,' the presiding judge replied.
A third executive, former games director Guillaume Patrux, received a 12-month suspended sentence for bullying that was on a 'smaller scale' but 'particularly intense for his team'.
The court ordered Francois to pay a €30,000 (RM149,450) fine, while Hascoet was fined €45,000 and Patrux €10,000.
'Held accountable'
During the trial, the defence lawyers insisted that their clients had never received any disciplinary warnings from human resources.
Ubisoft launched an internal investigation in 2020 after anonymous testimonies emerged on social media accusing the company of a toxic work culture.
The gaming industry has been scrutinised for years over its treatment of women and minorities in the workplace — and the way they are depicted in games.
Hascoet resigned from his post as chief creative officer after the allegations surfaced in the media.
Francois and Patrux were dismissed for serious misconduct following an internal inquiry in 2020.
A lawyer for the civil parties hailed the decision on Wednesday as a broader victory against workplace harassment.
'This is a very good decision today, and for the future, said Maude Beckers.
'For all companies, it means that when there is toxic management, managers must be held accountable and employers can no longer let it slide,' she added. — AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Free Malaysia Today
2 days ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Frenchman freed after years on death row in Indonesia
Serge Atlaoui was flown back to France in February after being on death row in Indonesia since 2007. (EPA Images pic) PARIS : A Frenchman who spent almost two decades on death row in Indonesia over drug offences before being returned to France left prison today after being granted a conditional release. Serge Atlaoui, a 61-year-old welder from Metz in eastern France, was flown back to home in February after being on death row in Indonesia since 2007. He was greeted by his lawyer, Richard Sedillot, as he walked out of the gate of Meaux prison near Paris, wearing a white T-shirt and grey trousers. 'He will be able to breathe the freedom that he waited for all these years,' his wife, Sabine Atlaoui, told RTL broadcaster shortly before his release, which she called 'unbelievable'. She had not yet 'fully realised' that her husband 'is back and will be with us again every day', she said. The father of four had his sentence adapted by the French courts to 30 years' imprisonment and then was approved for conditional release. 'The story of Serge Atlaoui, who was sentenced to death, is a life lesson,' Sedillot told AFP while he waited for his client. 'His resilience, his courage, his patience and his humanity are lessons for all of us.' Diplomatic pressure Atlaoui was arrested in 2005 at a factory in a Jakarta suburb where dozens of kilogrammes of drugs were discovered, and accused of being a 'chemist' by the authorities. He has always denied being a drug trafficker, saying he was installing machinery in what he thought was an acrylic factory. Initially sentenced to life in prison, he had his sentence reviewed by the Indonesia's Supreme Court and changed to death on appeal. He was due to be executed alongside eight others in 2015 but was granted a reprieve after Paris applied pressure and the Indonesian authorities allowed an outstanding appeal to proceed. Atlaoui's case attracted attention in Indonesia and in France, where supporters saw him as a symbol of the fight against the death penalty. France abolished capital punishment in 1981. Pressure applied by the French government was key to her husband's release, Sabine Atlaoui said. 'It's very clear that diplomatic efforts during all those years allowed my husband to return,' she said. Indonesia, which has some of the world's toughest drug laws, has recently released several high-profile detainees, including a Filipina mother on death row and the last five members of the so-called 'Bali Nine' drug ring.


Malay Mail
2 days ago
- Malay Mail
€180,000 question: Mbappe's alleged ‘under-the-table' police payments spark French fraud probe
PARIS, July 18 — An investigation has been opened into potentially fraudulent payments made by Kylian Mbappe to five police officers assigned to protect the French national football team, the public prosecutor's office told AFP yesterday. The probe comes after a tip-off from the French finance ministry's anti-money laundering unit, which reported 'unusual financial transactions' benefitting the five police officers. 'Investigations, which are by their very nature complex in the case of financial transactions, are underway in order to establish whether any criminal offences have been committed,' the public prosecutor's office said. French investigative weekly Le Canard Enchaine on Wednesday reported that the France national team captain's money was used to 'pay under the table for private services', to the tune of €180,300 (RM900,000). The Real Madrid striker's entourage issued a statement saying 'everything was done in compliance with the rules'. It added that Mbappe had 'always chosen to donate in full his bonuses' for playing for France at international level. 'It's what he did after the 2022 World Cup, with complete transparency,' the statement continued, saying the money went to charitable organisations and security personnel that accompanied the team. — AFP


Malay Mail
2 days ago
- Malay Mail
World record marathoner Ruth Chepngetich suspended over banned diuretic
PARIS, July 18 — Ruth Chepngetich, the Kenyan who shattered the women's marathon world record last year, has been provisionally suspended on suspicion of doping, the Athletics Integrity Unit said on Thursday. Chepngetich, who improved the record to 2hr 09min 56sec in Chicago in October, has been suspended after testing positive for the banned diuretic hydrochlorothiazide on March 14 this year. AIU head Brett Clothier said 30-year-old Chepngetich's case was being investigated and would be heard by a disciplinary tribunal. 'When there is a positive test for diuretics and masking agents, a provisional suspension is not mandatory under the World Anti-Doping Code,' he explained. 'Chepngetich was not provisionally suspended by the AIU at the time of notification. However, on 19 April she opted for a voluntary provisional suspension while the AIU's investigation was ongoing. 'In the intervening months, the AIU continued its investigation and today issued a Notice of Charge and imposed its own provisional suspension.' In April, Chepngetich withdrew from the London Marathon, saying she was 'not in the right place mentally or physically to race my best'. Hydrochlorothiazide is used to treat fluid retention and hypertension. — AFP