He could have been president of France. Instead, former Prime Minister Francois Fillon is going on trial to face fraud charges after he used public funds to richly pay his wife and children for work they allegedly never performed.
The trial beginning Monday is scheduled to last until March 11, but it may be quickly suspended until Wednesday on request from Fillon's defence team out of solidarity with a lawyers' strike against French President Emmanuel Macron's controversial pension reform.
Fillon is suspected of having given jobs as parliamentary aides, involving no sustained work, to his wife and two of their children from 1998 to 2013.
Altogether, the aide work brought the family more than 1 million euros (USD 1.08 million).
Once the front-runner in the 2017 presidential election, Fillon, 65, has denied wrongdoing.
The scandal, which made headline in the French media just three months before the 2017 vote, crushed the conservative candidate's campaign and allowed centrist candidate Macron to gain momentum.
Fillon has been charged with the misuse of public funds, receiving money from the misuse of public funds and the misappropriation of company assets. He faces up to ten years in prison and a 1 million euro fine.
His wife, Penelope Fillon, has been charged mostly as an accomplice.
A former lawmaker, Marc Joulaud, also goes on trial for misuse of public funds after he allegedly gave her a fake job as an aide from 2002 to 2007, while her husband was prime minister.
Fillon and Joulaud both had other parliamentary assistants.
In addition, charges also cover a contract that allowed Penelope Fillon to earn 135,000 euros in 2012-2013 as a consultant for a literary magazine owned by a friend of her husband also an alleged fake job.
The magazine owner, Marc de Lacharriere, pled guilty and was given a suspended eight-month prison sentence and fined 375,000 euros in 2018.
Fillon said last month on France 2 television that his wife's job was not fake. "She was my first and most important aide," he said. "Evidence will be produced during the trial."
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