The HR Tech Deel giant says it has officially agreed to serve legal documents in its ongoing judicial battle with the rival of Ireland. This ends the suspension weeks after rippling bailiffs could not find Deel’s executions to serve them – only Deel’s CEO and senior lawyer to appear in Dubai.
Deel Director General Alex Bouaziz, along with Deel Assif Malik and Andrea David Mieli’s lawyers, all agreed to accept the service through the Irish legal firm of Deel today, Deel confirmed to Techcrunch. Deel Inc., which is the American Entity of Deel, has already served on April 16, a statement submitted this morning to the Irish court.
“Today in court in Dublin the lawyers agreed to accept the service on behalf of all four parties,” a Deel Techcrunch spokesman told.
In the assertion presented this morning, reiterating that he had not been able to serve Bouaziz, Malik and Miel, detailing his efforts to do so in France and Italy. For example, Rippling hired French bailiffs to serve Bouaziz at an address listed in Paris on April 10, but only stumbled upon a relative who told them Bouaziz was in Dubai.
On April 15, Techcrunch reported that Bouaziz was in Dubai, with Deel not responding to commentary requests at the time. However, 10 days later, Deel told Techcrunch that Bouaziz “lives in Israel” and was only in Dubai for a few days to celebrate Passover.
Techcrunch asked Deel if he could clarify where Bouaziz was currently located, but Deel refused, citing the reasons for intimacy.
Deel struck the idea that its leaders have avoided service, despite failed rippling efforts to do so through various process servers. “It is a misappropriation that someone was avoiding service and that the narrative was clearly used as a tactic of public staining,” Deel’s spokesman said.
Deel told Techcrunch that Malik’s Movement in Dubai was planned for more than a year, far ahead of the rippling lawsuit. As for Andrea David Miel, whom Rippling said in their claim that they had not been able to serve in Italy, Deel said he lives and works from home to Italy and was available.
The lawsuit focuses on the claims of rippling that Deel bribes one of its employees in Ireland, Keith O’Brien, to spy on her internal affairs on behalf of Deel. And O’Brien himself testified that he had spied on a long assertion.
After a few weeks of silence, Deel is struggling very publicly, presenting a US counter last week, making various accusations against ripping, including that she cultivated her own interior inside Deel.
In response, the Director General of Rippling Parker Conrad took to the X to post, “Nowhere does Deel opposes our central claim – that @bouzizalex personally recruited a spy to steal the secrets of rippling trade, and personally directed the theft.”
Rippling did not respond to a comment request.