Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy

  1. DATA CONTROLLER

The data controller for the processing carried out via the website https://sandroassogna.com is the law firm whose registered office is located at 18 rue de Tilsitt, 75017 Paris, registered with the SIRENE directory under number 947 820 981 and with SIRET number: 947 820 981 00019 – APE code: 6910Z (legal activities – sole practitioner).

 

  1. DATA PROTECTION OFFICER (DPO)

The contact details of the firm’s Data Protection Officer (DPO) are as follows: Maître Sandro Assogna, Attorney-at-Law (sandro.assogna@avocat.fr). The Data Protection Officer is responsible, in particular, for advising, informing and monitoring compliance with data protection regulations. He will be your primary point of contact for the exercise of your rights (as set out below).

 

  1. PURPOSES OF THE PROCESSING

The personal data processing carried out via the website www.sandroassogna.com includes:

 

  1. DATA RECIPIENTS

The lawyer acting as data controller, who is responsible for the website, is the sole recipient of the data submitted by users and clients.

Such data are not disclosed to partners or third parties, nor used for purposes other than those specified, unless otherwise indicated and duly communicated. No personal data other than those requested in this context are collected without the knowledge of the data subjects.

 

  1. MANDATORY DATA AND OPTIONAL DATA

Only data strictly necessary for the implementation of the processing are requested from users and collected (principle of data minimisation). The data collected via the contact form are limited to those strictly necessary to establish contact and process requests (data minimisation principle under Article 5 of the GDPR).

In this respect:

Full name: enables identification of the individual and ensures a personalised and professional relationship, in line with the standards of the legal profession;

Email address: necessary to provide a written response and ensure follow-up of communications;

Telephone number (where a call-back is requested): necessary to contact the individual in connection with their request;

Content of the message: essential to understand the subject matter of the request and provide an appropriate response.

These data are required to enable the firm to process the request: failure to provide them will prevent the request from being handled.

The contact form is not intended to collect unnecessary data. However, users remain free to voluntarily provide additional information within the body of their message. Users are encouraged to disclose only information strictly necessary for their request.

In any event, the firm undertakes not to collect or process data that are excessive in relation to the purposes pursued.

 

  1. DATA RETENTION PERIODS

The data collected are retained as follows:

 

  1. TRANSFER OF DATA OUTSIDE THE EUROPEAN UNION

Certain tools used on this website, in particular audience measurement services such as Google Analytics, may involve transfers of personal data outside the European Union, including to the United States. Where such transfers take place, they are carried out in compliance with the applicable regulations, in particular on the basis of the adequacy decision relating to the EU–US Data Privacy Framework or other appropriate safeguards within the meaning of the GDPR.

 

  1. DATA SECURITY

Data transmitted via the website are subject to continuous attention with regard to their security and confidentiality. In addition to the use of an HTTPS-secured website, access to administrator accounts [and/or user accounts] is protected by strong passwords and multi-factor authentication. The same level of security applies to the email inbox receiving personal data from users and clients.

Furthermore, the website www.sandroassogna.com is equipped with multiple security modules designed to prevent, as far as possible, malicious intrusions and data breaches.

 

  1. RIGHTS OF DATA SUBJECTS

In accordance with French Law No. 78-18 of 6 January 1978 relating to data processing, files and freedoms, as amended, as well as the General Data Protection Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016, and in particular Articles 15 et seq., users of this website benefit, depending on the circumstances, from rights of access, rectification, erasure and portability of their personal data, as well as rights to restriction of processing and to object to processing carried out via the firm’s website.

Data subjects may exercise these rights by sending an email or a postal request to: Sandro Assogna, Attorney-at-Law, 18 rue de Tilsitt, 75017 Paris (sandro.assogna@avocat.fr).

 

  1. COMPLAINTS

Users of this website or clients of the lawyer may at any time lodge a complaint with the Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL), the French supervisory authority, by writing to: CNIL – 3 place de Fontenoy – TSA 80715 – 75334 Paris Cedex 07, or directly online at: www.cnil.fr/plaintes.

This may be done in particular in the event of failure by the data controller to respond to the exercise of “Informatique et Libertés” rights (such as the right of access to personal data, see above), or in the event of a manifest breach of personal data protection rules by the data controller.

 

Cookie Policy

In accordance with applicable privacy regulations, Sandro Assogna, Data Controller of the data acquired through this website, informs the user that this website uses cookies to provide services and features to its users. It is possible to limit or disable the use of cookies via your web browser, although without cookies, some or all of the website’s features may become unusable.

What are Cookies?

In computing, HTTPS cookies (more commonly known as Web cookies, tracking cookies, or simply cookies) are lines of text used to perform automatic authentication, session tracking, and the storage of specific information regarding users accessing the server, such as favorite websites or, in the case of online purchases, the contents of their “shopping carts”. In detail, they are small text strings sent by a server to a Web client (usually a browser) and then sent back by the client to the server (without being modified) each time the client accesses the same portion of the same web domain. The term “cookie” comes from “magic cookie”, a well-known concept in the UNIX environment that inspired both the idea and the name of HTTPS cookies.

What types of Cookies are present on this website?

How can you limit or disable Cookies?

Every Web browser allows you to limit or disable cookies. For more information on cookie management, please consult the respective pages on the subject:

Profile
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Sandro Assogna

Member of the Paris Bar, I place cross-disciplinary legal practice at the service of one conviction: protecting the rights and interests of the individual, by shedding light on complexity through the search for solutions.

A path

My professional path was built step by step, at the crossroads of several legal traditions. My initial training, enriched between Bocconi University in Milan and the Sorbonne, laid the foundations for a practice oriented towards taxation, wealth and the international dimension of the law.

My early years of practice were spent in international firms in Italy, before I joined Deloitte Société d’Avocats in Paris, where I worked for a decade in the Individual Tax and International Mobility department. A field that lies, by its very nature, at the crossroads of personal tax law, wealth law, employment law and social security — and which calls precisely for that cross-disciplinary reading that defines my practice.

At the end of 2022, I founded my own firm, designed in my image: independent, demanding, deeply committed to personalised client service.

Cross-disciplinary practice as a method

The singularity of a legal situation rarely reveals itself within a single branch of the law. An executive structuring his business wealth, a senior employee negotiating his exit, a family transferring international wealth, an individual moving his tax residency, an artist or athlete securing the taxation of international income: each of these matters reads simultaneously through the lens of tax law, wealth law, employment law — and often private international law.

This ability to analyse a question through two or three legal angles at once has accompanied me from my very first matters. It is now the heart of my method: deciphering complexity, identifying the often invisible interactions between applicable regimes, and building solutions secure in all their dimensions.

An inherently international practice

Fluent in French, Italian and English, I work regularly on cross-border matters. My network of partner counsel allows me to coordinate in real time the multi-jurisdictional implications of every matter — in Europe, the United States, Brazil, Japan and India, among others.

This international practice is not an additional service: it is consubstantial with the way I practise law, inherited from my years in international firms and nourished daily by the diversity of situations encountered.

An ongoing commitment: training and network

The demands of the legal profession require continuous training, monitoring and exchange with peers. I have chosen to embed this commitment in time, through my membership of several leading institutions:

  • IACF — Institut des Avocats Conseils Fiscaux: the leading French association of tax lawyers, which shapes the professional doctrine of the field.
  • AUREP — Association Universitaire de Recherche et d’Enseignement sur le Patrimoine: a leading academic centre in wealth engineering, bringing together academics and practitioners around research, continuing education and analysis of developments in wealth law.
  • IBA — International Bar Association: the leading global organisation of lawyers, which supports my international network and provides ongoing monitoring of developments in cross-border law.
Let’s discuss your situation.