According to some journalistic articles, the GEPM was connected to the First Assembly of God Church, deemed a
far-right evangelist church, directed in the U.S. by Godzich's brother, and many distributors of the GEPM were baptized in this church. In addition, excessive demands for money and the huge time devoted to the GEPM, it was deemed harmful to member's family life and led to numerous complaints to the Institut national de la Consommation and to anti-cult associations (
UNADFI,
CCMM, Secticide). In 1995, the premises of French anti-cult association
UNADFI were invaded by members of the GEPM to protest against the accusations of cultic deviances and asked the then president, Janine Tavernier, to explain why the group was criticized. The police were forced to intervene. The group was placed in receivership in 1995. The group was classified as
cult in the
1995 and 1999 reports established by the
Parliamentary Commission on Cults in France (under the name CEDIPAC SA, its new name then, then under Federation of the networks agreement [Fédération d'agrément des réseaux or FAR], a group founded by former members). It was labelled as "evangelical" cult. Sociologist
Bruno Étienne criticized this classification, as the group's activity mainly consists in multi-level marketing. The CCMM, as well as
Jean Vernette, then national secretary of French episcopate for the study of cults and new religious movements, also considered this qualification as irrelevant. On June, the 22nd 1997, at the Zénith, Paris, crowded by more than 6000 distributors, the Federation of networks agreement (Fédération d'agrément des réseaux or
FAR), created by former GEPM members (Jean-Claude Martini, Gilbert Husson, André-Pierre Alexandre, Thierry Vavasseur,...) officially launches the new "Direct Distribution Franchise"
AKEO which will be taken over by the new company
NOAO created by André-Pierre Alexandre in 2001. In 2007, Godzich was condemned of three-year prison and 500,000-euro fine, for abuse of social goods. ==References==