Toronto Star

2 Uber execs ordered to stand trial in France

Despite ban passed last October, ride-booking service has been recruiting drivers and passengers

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PARIS— Two Uber France managers have been ordered to stand trial to face charges including “deceptive commercial practices” and complicity in illegal activities linked to its low-cost ride-hailing service, the Paris prosecutor’s office said Tuesday.

Thibault Simphal and Pierre-Dimitri Gore-Coty, who have been targeted in their capacities as representa­tives of the San Francisco-based company, were arrested on Monday after a police sweep at Uber France headquarte­rs. They were later released and ordered to appear in a Paris criminal court on Sept. 30.

A spokesman for Uber France could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

The app-based service connects drivers with riders, while the low-cost UberPop links users to drivers without profession­al taxi or chauffeur licences.

French authoritie­s say UberPop is illegal and have expressed frustratio­n that Uber doesn’t pay the same taxes and social charges as traditiona­l taxis. Uber in- sists the French system is outdated and says it needs reform to keep up with technologi­cal changes.

Tensions have been growing over the issue. Claiming unfair competitio­n, taxi drivers staged a violence-marred strike on the issue last week, blocking many roads across France.

A law banning UberPop was approved in October, but its drivers continue to ply French roads. The company has been actively recruiting drivers and passengers. Uber claims to have a total of 400,000 customers a month in France.

The prosecutor’s office mobilized a special transporta­tion police force and another that focuses on fraud related to informatio­n technology as part of a probe of Uber opened in November. It said 202 people have been fined, one was handed a 15-day suspended prison sentence and another 79 cases are under way.

The six counts faced by the Uber executives include “deceptive commercial practices,” complicity in instigatin­g an illegal taxi-driving activity and the illegal stocking of personal informatio­n.

Uber Technologi­es Inc. has also run into legal problems elsewhere in Europe, as well as in China and India.

 ?? BERTRAND LANGLOIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Taxi drivers in France, claiming Uber creates unfair competitio­n, blocked many roads across the country last week in a violence-marred protest.
BERTRAND LANGLOIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Taxi drivers in France, claiming Uber creates unfair competitio­n, blocked many roads across the country last week in a violence-marred protest.

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