Lycamobile’s French company bosses fined and jailed for money laundering 17mn euros.
01/11/2023
A Paris court on Thursday fined Lycamobile’s French companies 10mn euros for money laundering and value-added tax (VAT) fraud.
The group’s former chief executive officer Christopher Tooley also received a prison sentence and a heavy fine for complicity in the VAT fraud, agency reports said.
Lycamobile, owned by Subaskaran Allirajah, has said it disagreed with the decision and has appealed.
Four months after the trial ended, the court ruled that the companies had “knowingly participated in a complex and elaborate system of money laundering” between 2014 and 2016, which involved 17 euros.
The reports said this system involved a series of shell companies, two Lycamobile salespeople and resellers in the Parisian district of La Chapelle. It operated for construction companies demanding cash to pay employees illegally.
The companies were also found guilty of having “deceived” the tax authorities in a “misguided” legal regime allowing exemption from VAT within the framework of a “strategy” to be more “competitive”.
“The money laundering accusations concern the activities of two salespeople who were laid off and fired upon discovering this parallel activity,” Lycamobile said. Lycamobile Services was fined 3mn euros, and Lycamobile France 7mn euros.
Mr. Tooley was sentenced to three years’ imprisonment and fined 250,000 euros. He is banned from managing a business for five years. The group’s other British leader, Andrew England, was released.
Lycamobile’s General Manager in France, Alain Jochimek, was sentenced in both parts of the case to three years in prison, including eighteen months to be served under an electronic bracelet, with a fine of 120,000 euros. He was also prohibited from managing a business for five years.
The Team
Meet the team of industry experts behind Comsure
Find out moreLatest News
Keep up to date with the very latest news from Comsure
Find out moreGallery
View our latest imagery from our news and work
Find out moreContact
Think we can help you and your business? Chat to us today
Get In TouchNews Disclaimer
As well as owning and publishing Comsure's copyrighted works, Comsure wishes to use the copyright-protected works of others. To do so, Comsure is applying for exemptions in the UK copyright law. There are certain very specific situations where Comsure is permitted to do so without seeking permission from the owner. These exemptions are in the copyright sections of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (as amended)[www.gov.UK/government/publications/copyright-acts-and-related-laws]. Many situations allow for Comsure to apply for exemptions. These include 1] Non-commercial research and private study, 2] Criticism, review and reporting of current events, 3] the copying of works in any medium as long as the use is to illustrate a point. 4] no posting is for commercial purposes [payment]. (for a full list of exemptions, please read here www.gov.uk/guidance/exceptions-to-copyright]. Concerning the exceptions, Comsure will acknowledge the work of the source author by providing a link to the source material. Comsure claims no ownership of non-Comsure content. The non-Comsure articles posted on the Comsure website are deemed important, relevant, and newsworthy to a Comsure audience (e.g. regulated financial services and professional firms [DNFSBs]). Comsure does not wish to take any credit for the publication, and the publication can be read in full in its original form if you click the articles link that always accompanies the news item. Also, Comsure does not seek any payment for highlighting these important articles. If you want any article removed, Comsure will automatically do so on a reasonable request if you email info@comsuregroup.com.