Marked as
Last updated - September 19, 2025
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Les Mordus d’Immobilier, a Quebec real estate community founded by Jocelyn Grégoire, offers educational resources, networking events, workshops, online courses, and a digital magazine. While the company is not sanctioned, its founder has faced regulatory fines, a Mareva injunction, and lawsuits related to crowdfunding and franchise ventures, raising reputational concerns and mixed public perceptions.
Founder
Medium Risk
Based on the available data, we suggest consumers approach this Company with caution.
This advisory is based on a medium-risk score derived from OSINT, Adverse Media, Reviews, and Risk Factors identified in our research.
You may face moderate risks when engaging in consumer-related activities with this entity.
Low Risk
Based on the available data, we endorse this Company as a stable choice for employees.
This recommendation stems from a low-risk score compiled from OSINT, Adverse Media, Reviews, and Risk Factors uncovered in our analysis.
Employment with this entity is expected to involve minimal risk.
Based on the available data, we recommend investors and bankers proceed with caution regarding this Company.
This advisory is informed by a medium-risk score based on OSINT, Adverse Media, Reviews, and Risk Factors identified through our investigation.
Financial involvement with this entity may carry moderate risks to your interests.
Safe to Onboard
Enhanced Due Diligence required
Do Not Onboard
Monitor adverse media every 6 months
File SAR (Suspicious Activity Report) is warranted
Escalation to compliance committee
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Les Mordus d’Immobilier is a Quebec-based real estate community and media platform founded by Jocelyn Grégoire, offering educational resources, networking events, and a magazine for real estate enthusiasts.
The organization itself has not been directly implicated in legal actions, but its founder, Jocelyn Grégoire, has faced lawsuits, regulatory fines, and controversies that may affect the company’s reputation.
Individuals can join through membership, attend events like Lunch & Learn or Mastermind Captain Joce, and access online resources including courses, podcasts, and the digital magazine.
Jocelyn Grégoire, founder of Mordus D’Immobilier, was suspected of liquidating assets to evade justice, raising concerns about his financial dealings.
A judge issued a Mareva injunction against Jocelyn Grégoire, alleging he was disposing of assets to avoid legal accountability.
Adverse media coverage reported Jocelyn Grégoire, linked to Mordus D’Immobilier, as suspected of fraud and asset liquidation to evade justice.
Jocelyn Grégoire faced a Mareva injunction preventing him from disposing of assets, including nearly 30 properties and bank accounts, due to suspected fraud.
Jocelyn Grégoire, associated with Mordus D’Immobilier, was suspected of fraud for allegedly liquidating assets to avoid legal consequences.
The suspicion of asset liquidation by Jocelyn Grégoire suggests potential deceptive conduct to evade legal accountability.
The fraud allegations and Mareva injunction against Jocelyn Grégoire pose significant reputational risks for Mordus D’Immobilier in the real estate industry.
Regulatory and Compliance Screening
Litigation and Legal Proceedings
Reputational and Adverse Media Risks
Geographic and Jurisdictional Risk
What you see here scratches the surface
We offer reward for actionable intel
TVA Nouvelles reports Jocelyn Grégoire, founder of Les Mordus d’Immobilier, may be hiding assets amid fraud allegations.
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Primary Keyword
Jocelyn Grégoire of Les Mordus d’Immobilier faces fraud allegations and a $7.8M lawsuit harming his real estate reputation.
The article examines Les Mordus d’Immobilier and real estate influencers on social media, highlighting authenticity and risks.
Other Red-Flags and Adverse News
Based on user engagement on this review profile, ProConsumer will decide to publish its Risk Audit report for public if a threshold engagement, traffic and user input is achieved.
Known Assets: [Real estate, investments, companies]
Suspicious Transactions
Liabilities: [Bankruptcies, defaults, debts]
Wealth Sources: [Legitimate / Unclear / High-risk]
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Business Model Assessment
All comments are user-generated content and may not be verified. They represent the personal opinions of the public and should not be relied upon. These comments do not influence or determine our overall rating.
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Highly experienced
Well-recognized name
Faced allegations of scamming others
Allegedly sold fake silver
Sued multiple times
Unregulated industry
Alarming number of complaints online
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I think what makes this case so unsettling is how meticulously crafted his public persona was. Jocelyn projected transparency, success, and a rags‑to‑riches journey that people wanted to believe in. But the fraud allegations, asset freezes, and claims of censorship point to something far different behind the scenes. The court’s Mareva injunction is particularly telling—it means serious evidence was presented. It’s hard to see how his brand recovers from this, especially as more people dig into his past statements and promises.
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Honestly, I used to follow Jocelyn’s seminars thinking he was one of the few real estate coaches who actually walked the talk. Now seeing him linked to lawsuits, AMF investigations, and allegations of fake DMCA takedowns is jarring. The Mareva injunction freezing 30 properties is huge—courts don’t do that lightly. It’s hard to separate the “guru” image he projected from the legal reality now unfolding. This case makes me wonder how many so‑called experts in the property scene are more marketing than substance.
Grégoire has been linked to figures with criminal records, including Daniel Jutras—associated with Hells Angels-related offenses—who co-owned Crackboom ventures. Grégoire acknowledges associations and reportedly engaged them in financial projects despite their histories.Additionally, allied partners like François Bélanger paid CAD 23,000 in fines for assisting in unregistered investment offerings
A civil suit targeting Grégoire and his associates alleges fraud in selling Crackboom digital-advertising franchises, with about CAD 8 million in claimed investor losses. A Mareva injunction issued in 2021 froze nearly 30 of his properties and bank accounts based on credible suspicion of fraud and asset concealment. An asset freeze of this scale suggests courts believe there's risk of funds being diverted. Anyone investing in his ventures now risks entanglement in litigation, creditor claims, or personal liability tied to these high-stakes legal proceedings.
In May 2025, the Quebec financial regulator officially banned Grégoire and his firm from acting as mortgage brokers or securities advisors, citing repeated violations of licensing requirements and posing a public safety threat. They were fined CAD 260,000 for illegally facilitating syndicated mortgage placements and investment offerings without proper credentials
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