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Dukan, 76, has sold more than 11 million copies of his protein-rich diet plan worldwide.
Dukan, 76, has sold more than 11 million copies of his protein-rich diet plan worldwide. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
Dukan, 76, has sold more than 11 million copies of his protein-rich diet plan worldwide. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

Pierre Dukan, inventor of controversial Dukan diet, sued for fraud

This article is more than 6 years old
  • Civil suit alleges French doctor was fraudulent in dealings with financiers
  • Diet plan was popular with celebrities but criticised by medical groups

The embattled originator of the Dukan diet, Pierre Dukan, is being sued in New York for fraudulent dealings with his financiers, according to court filings.

The civil complaint, made by a European private equity fund, alleges that the retired French doctor and nutritionist “fraudulently obtain[ed] financing and strategic financial advisory services … without any intention of fulfilling their contractual obligations to either repay or convert the loans provided”.

The funds, which total in the hundreds of thousands, were sought by Dukan to market his diet in the US, the suit alleges.

The lawsuit marks the latest chapter in the fall of Dukan, whose protein-rich diet became a popular weight-loss plan for celebrities, but was later mired in allegations of ethical breaches and potential harm.

Dukan, 76, sold more than 11 million copies of his protein-rich diet plan worldwide and counted Kate Middleton, Jennifer Lopez and Penelope Cruz among his celebrity practitioners.

Dukan’s high-protein, low-fat, low-carbohydrate was similar to the Atkins diet, which peaked during the early 2000s.

In November of 2011, the British Dietetic Association named the Dukan diet as one of the worst “celebrity diets” of the year.

At the same time, a survey of 5,000 people in France who had followed the diet found 35% regained the weight they lost within a year, and 80% regained it more than four years later.

In 2014, the French national medical board revoked Dukan’s medical license, arguing that he “promoted his slimming diet commercially”. France’s Order of Doctors’ regulations prevent medical practice from being a commercial venture.

He also censured in 2013 for misprescribing the amphetamine-derivative diet drug Mediator to a patient who wanted to lose weight. The drug is now believed to have killed hundreds of users. More than 100 practitioners in France faced similar reprimand, and the drug is no longer available.

Remora Capital, the plaintiff in the current case, has already won judgments in Luxembourg and France over similar loans made to the Dukan entities there.

The latest suit also names Dukan’s wife and children as defendants in the case, and argues they were “direct and indirect beneficiaries of the stolen funds.”

A request for comment by Dukan or his representatives was not immediately returned.

This article was amended on 31 August 2017 to remove a reference to Gisele Bundchen whose representatives contacted us after publication to say that she had never followed the Dukan diet.

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