prada outlet sale doudoune prada pas cher paris femme france

prada outlet sale on themselves over four years.They deny the accusations and their lawyers have claimed that there was a "tacit understanding" that the sisters were allowed to spend what they liked as long as they didn't tell anyone about Lawson's alleged drug use.The court has been told by the prosecution that in the four months to June 2012 alone, Francesca Grillo, 35, spent an average of 48,000 pounds per month and 41 year old Elisabetta 28,000 pounds.At various times, the court has heard, the sisters spent lavishly on flights to New York, hotel stays, designer handbags and expensive clothes.When Saatchi learned the amount the Grillos were spending, he said he thought they were being "naughty" and should accept penance for their actions.He told the Italian sisters they could pay back the money they owed by accepting a 50 percent wage cut and continuing to work for the family but said his then wife disagreed."She was very cross with me," he told the court. "She said, 'How could you do that? I would never have them in my house again and neither would the children.'"Lawson is due to be called as a witness next week. The trial is to resume on Wednesday.LONDON, Nov 29 Millionaire art dealer Charles Saatchi told a court on Friday he still "absolutely adores" his ex wife, TV chef Nigella Lawson, despite their very public divorce in July.The celebrity pair ended their 10 year marriage and Saatchi accepted a police caution after newspapers splashed pictures of him with his hands round her neck at a London restaurant in June.Saatchi's comments came during the trial of the pair's two personal assistants, Italian sisters Elisabetta and Francesca Grillo, who are accused of fraud by using credit cards lent to them by the couple to spend more than 685,000 pounds $1.1 million on themselves over four years.Husband did burn wife's posh undiesA Ferrari driving businessman, who burned his wife's collection of expensive underwear during an acrimonious divorce, has lost his appeals against two convictions for criminal damage.Insolvency consultant Neil Medley, 46, set fire to 7,000 of clothing belonging to his wife, Jane, and her sister, Linda Wellings, because he was angry with the way they were handling the