France's top appeals court on Wednesday upheld a fraud conviction and
hundreds of thousands of euros in fines against the Church of
Scientology for taking advantage of vulnerable followers.
The
Cour de Cassation rejected the organisation's request that a 2009
conviction for "organised fraud" be overturned on the grounds it
violated religious freedoms.
The group has previously indicated it will appeal the conviction to the European Court of Human Rights.
The
conviction saw Scientology's Celebrity Centre and its bookshop in
Paris, the two branches of its French operations, ordered to pay 600,000
euros ($812,000) in fines for preying financially on several followers
in the 1990s.
The original ruling, while stopping short of
banning the group from operating in France, dealt a blow to the
secretive movement best known for its Hollywood followers such as Tom
Cruise and John Travolta.
France regards Scientology as a cult,
not a religion, and had prosecuted individual Scientologists before, but
the 2009 trial marked the first time the organisation as a whole had
been convicted.
The head of a parliamentary group on religious cults in France, lawmaker Georges Fenech, hailed the ruling.
"Far
from being a violation of freedom of religion, as this American
organisation contends, this decision lifts the veil on the illegal and
highly detrimental practices" of the group, said Fenech.
The
court case followed a complaint by two women, one of whom said she was
manipulated into handing over 20,000 euros in 1998 for Scientology
products including an "electrometer" to measure mental energy.
A
second claimed she was forced by her Scientologist employer to undergo
testing and enrol in courses, also in 1998. When she refused she was
fired.
Founded in 1954 by US science fiction writer L. Ron
Hubbard, the Church of Scientology is recognised as a religion in the
United States. It claims a worldwide membership of 12 million including
45,000 followers in France.