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Sadri Fegaier, CEO of the Indexia group, sentenced to prison and a fine of 300,000 euros

The boss of the insurer was sentenced to 2 years in prison including 16 months and a fine of 300.00 euros.

Sadri Fegaier, the boss of the Indexia group, was sentenced this Tuesday to 2 years in prison including 16 months and a fine of 300,000 euros for misleading commercial practices concerning requests for termination and reimbursement of insurance contracts for telephones and computers .

The criminal court also sentenced six companies in the group to fines ranging from 150,000 euros to 1.5 million euros. It did not order the provisional execution of the prison sentence for Sadri Fegaier, as requested the prosecution during the hearing.

The firm part cannot be adjusted, and the remaining 8 months of prison are accompanied by probationary suspension for two years, during which Mr. Fegaier will have to reimburse the victims and the Public Treasury, specified the president, who read for two hours the decision.

Make cancellation and refund requests complex

At the end of the deliberations, the 45-year-old businessman and his lawyers left the courtroom without commenting. Sadri Fegaier, as well as the companies SARL SFK Group, SFAM Celside Insurance, Foriou, Cyrana, Hubside and Serena appeared in Paris at the end of September, suspected of having improperly made hundreds of consumers subscribe to insurance contracts for their multimedia devices (computers, telephones).

They were notably accused of having developed, between 2014 and 2022, a complex procedure aimed at discouraging them from their requests for termination or reimbursements. The Indexia group is mainly known for having sold so-called affinity insurance in Fnac-Darty stores between 2017 and 2019, but also in its own Hubside.Store stores. At the time of their purchases, consumers were offered insurance for around fifteen euros per month.

Years later, hundreds of people have seen the deductions multiply, reaching up to tens of thousands of euros in total, without having signed an endorsement or claiming to have never even signed an insurance contract. . Due to a lack of response from the companies concerned, deceived customers alerted the consumer association UFC-Que Choisir and sent reports to the fraud repression, which opened an investigation in 2018. This ended in 2019 with a criminal settlement of 10 million euros. However, the complaints continued, with many consumers denouncing cancellation and refund requests that were never implemented.

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