France, June 13 -- The trial is the latest case seeking justice for a spate of similar heists in recent years from libraries across Europe, suspected to be the work of an organised network with potential links to Russia.

The thieves made away with rare Russian classics worth millions in total, including by 19th-century literary greats Pushkin, Nikolai Gogol and Mikhail Lermontov.

The six defendants -- five men and a woman -- were all found guilty overnight Friday to Saturday of criminal conspiracy with intent to commit an offence, while some were rapped for the theft of a cultural asset on display. A university employee presents a fake copy of a first edition of the 1822 book 'Kavkazskiy plennik: povest' by Alexander Pushkin at the Univ...