Five former Ubisoft employees were detained in France this week — three on Tuesday, and two more on Wednesday, according to a report from French newspaper Libération. Former Ubisoft chief creative officer Serge Hascoët and former editorial vice president Tommy François were among the five people detained and questioned by French police.
In 2020, current and former Ubisoft workers accused the company of creating a culture that normalized sexual assault and harassment and allowed it to thrive; multiple top-level employees were accused. In the weeks and months following the allegations, several people resigned or were fired, including Maxime Béland, a former creative director and editorial vice president at Ubisoft Toronto accused of choking a female employee; Assassin’s Creed Valhalla creative director Ashraf Ismail, accused of having an inappropriate relationship with a fan; HR lead Cécile Cornet; and Ubisoft’s Canadian studio director Yannis Mallat.
Beyond Hascoët and François, Libération did not name the three other people questioned by police.
The investigation began in 2021 after French union Solidaires Informatique and several impacted employees filed complaints regarding Ubisoft and its culture. Police reportedly spoke to 50 current and former Ubisoft workers over a year, according to the French paper, before taking the five former employees into custody this week.
Hascoët, François, and others do not appear to have been charged, but French law allows police to arrest and hold people suspected of a crime for up to 24 hours without a charge. Polygon has reached out to the Bobigny, France, judicial court and to the victims’ lawyer, Maude Beckers. We’ll update this story when we hear back.
Beckers told Libération,
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