FRANCE'S former prime minister Francois Fillon and his Llanover-born wife Penelope have been found guilty in a fraud trial.

Mr Fillon, 66, was accused of using public funds to pay his wife and children for work they never performed.

Both had denied any wrongdoing.

Fillon was sentenced to five years in prison, three of them suspended, and a 375,000 euro fine.

He is also banned from seeking an elected office for 10 years.

He remains free pending appeal.

His wife, 64, who went to school in Abergavenny, was found guilty as an accomplice and has been given a three-year suspended sentence and the same size fine.

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The scandal broke in the French media just three months before the country's 2017 presidential election, as Fillon was the front-runner in the race.

It cost him his reputation.

Fillon sunk to third place in the election, which was won by Emmanuel Macron.

The work had brought the family more than one million euros since 1998.

After missing out on a place in the run-off in 2017, Fillon, who was France's prime minister from 2007 to 2012, then left politics.

A last-minute request from Fillon's lawyers had cast uncertainty over whether a verdict would be delivered on Monday.

The move came after the former head of France's financial prosecutors, Eliane Houlette, said earlier this month that she had come under pressure over her handling of the case, in reference to close supervision by her superiors.