Suspended sentence in Picasso 'stolen works' trial

A French court on March 20 handed down a two-year suspended sentence to a former electrician and his wife, who hid 271 Picasso works in their garage for close to 40 years.
      
The court in the French Riviera town of Grasse found Pierre and Danielle Le Guennec guilty of possessing stolen goods, after a trial that made headlines in France and abroad.
      
The works have been seized by authorities and will be returned to the Picasso Administration, which represents the artist's heirs.
      
There has been no value placed on the collection.
      
"We're disappointed," mumbled Pierre Le Guennec, now 75 and retired.
      
"We're honest people. Perhaps we don't know how to speak..." he added, before his wife blurted out: "We're just little people. We don't have a great name."       

Prosecutors had called for the couple to receive a five-year suspended jail sentence.
     
The couple's lawyer, Evelyne Rees, said she would appeal the verdict.
      
"At 10:00 am, we had a solar eclipse and this decision eclipses the truth," she said.
      
Pierre Le Guennec insisted throughout the trial that the art legend and his wife gave him the treasure trove when he was working on the last property they lived in before Picasso died in 1973.
      
"Picasso had total confidence in me. Maybe it was my discretion," Le Guennec told the court.
      
"Monsieur and Madame called me 'little cousin'."       

He said that one day, Picasso's wife Jacqueline came up to him and gave him a box with the 271 works inside, saying "this is for you."       

When he got home, he found what he described as "drawings, sketches, crumpled paper."        Uninterested in the haul, he...

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