Prosecutors have asked for time to assess the value of the home of football fraudster Karen Prictor, 47, as they seek to claw back her ill gotten gains.

The former treasurer of the North Wiltshire and District Youth and Minor Football League plundered almost £200,000 from the organisation over five years.

And Prictor used the money to fund a lifestyle beyond her means as she siphoned off cash which had been paid in subs by children and their families.

She is claiming her family home, which underwent renovations including adding a cinema room, is worth just £140,000 - a valuation prosecutors dispute.

And the authorities are also going after the pension fund of the woman who worked at Cotswold district and Swindon borough councils as well as Thames Water.

Prictor, who was jailed for four years in July, is being pursued under the Proceeds of Crime Act as prosecutors try to recoup what she took.

Colin Meeke, for the Crown, told Swindon Crown Court that they were not satisfied with some of the valuations being put forward.

"The value on the house, £140,000, we think is substantially under true value including a garage concerted to a cinema room," he said.

"We think the value placed on that is significantly greater than it is. The other major asset is the declaration of the pension fund: that could take a little bit of time."

Judge Peter Blair QC said: "We had pictures of it in the trial of her husband and I recall it was in a nice state of repair."

The case was adjourned to a date later in the year where a judge will rule on the value of her criminal activity and how much she should repay.

Prictor, of Beverley, Toothill, was jailed after she admitted fraud, possessing criminal property and two counts of forgery.

She also pleaded guilty to a passport offence as she applied for new travel documents to go to Cancun not revealing the police had the original.

As well as pocketing the money she produced false bank statements when an investigation was started.

And she continued to take money from the league after the FA banned her from all football activities by using someone else's name.

Margaret Rivers, 55, of Ramleaze Drive, who founded the league and was its chairman, was also jailed for two year and four months for fraud.

Her 58-year-old husband Andrew, who goes by the name Philip, was ordered to do 200 hours of unpaid work after admitting possessing criminal property.

Sentencing them the judge told the women that they treated the league as their own 'personal fiefdom'.

He added: "You used this as a source of money to live a lifestyle beyond your normal employed means."

Prictor's husband, Kevin, 58, denied possessing criminal property and was acquitted by a jury.