Thieves break into Louvre in daring daytime heist, steal ‘priceless jewellery’

French Culture Minister Rachida Dati on Sunday reported a theft at the Louvre in Paris as the world-renowned museum said it was closing for the day.
“A robbery took place this morning at the opening of the Louvre Museum,” she wrote on X. The Louvre said it was closing for the day “for exceptional reasons”, without providing further details on what had been stolen.
Accept
Manage my choices
There were no injuries reported. Dati said she was at the museum and investigations were underway.
The robbery took around four minutes, Dati later told TF1, and it was carried out by professionals.
“We saw some footage: they don’t target people, they enter calmly in four minutes, smash display cases, take their loot, and leave. No violence, very professional,” she said on TF1.
She said one piece of jewellery had been recovered outside the museum, apparently dropped as they made their escape.
French authorities confirmed they found the 19th-century crown that once belonging to Empress Eugenie, the wife of Napoleon III. The crown features golden eagles and is covered in 1,354 diamonds and 56 emeralds, according to the museum’s website.
Daring heist at the Louvre Museum in Paris
Accept
Manage my choices
One of your browser extensions seems to be blocking the video player from loading. To watch this content, you may need to disable it on this site.
Try again
© France 24
French Interior Minister Laurent Nunez said the “major robbery” said the thieves used a crane that was positioned on a truck to enter the building. They stole jewels of “priceless value”.
It was “manifestly a team that had done scouting”, he said, adding that the panes were cut “with a disc cutter”.
The interior ministry specified the location as the Galerie d’Apollon.
Visitors evacuated
Police sealed off the museum and evacuated visitors. New arrivals were turned away and nearby streets were closed, according to the interior ministry.
A police source told AFP that an unknown number of thieves arrived at the Louvre on a scooter armed with small chainsaws and used a freight lift to reach the room they were targeting.
Louvre museum authorities could not immediately be reached for comment, according to French media reports.
But the Louvre confirmed that the museum was closed Sunday due to “exceptional reasons”, in a post on X.
Accept
Manage my choices
According to French daily, Le Parisien, the criminals entered the sprawling building from the facade facing the Seine River, where construction work is underway.
After breaking the windows, they reportedly stole “nine pieces from the jewellery collection of Napoleon and the Empress”, said the report.
Echoes other recent break-ins
The theft, less than half an hour after doors opened, echoes other recent European museum raids.
In 2019, thieves smashed vitrines in Dresden’s Green Vault and carried off diamond-studded royal jewels worth hundreds of millions of euros. In 2017, burglars at Berlin’s Bode Museum stole a 100-kilogram (220-pound) solid-gold coin. In 2010, a lone intruder slipped into Paris’s Museum of Modern Art and escaped with five paintings, including a Picasso.
The robbery is likely to raise awkward questions about security at the museum, where officials had already sounded the alarm about lack of investment at a world-famous site that welcomed 8.7 million visitors in 2024.
The Louvre has a long history of thefts and attempted robberies. The most famous was in 1911, when the Mona Lisa vanished from its frame, stolen by Vincenzo Peruggia, a former worker who hid inside the museum and walked out with the painting under his coat. It was recovered two years later in Florence – an episode that helped make Leonardo da Vinci’s portrait the world’s best-known artwork.
Home to more than 33,000 works spanning antiquities, sculpture and painting – from Mesopotamia, Egypt and the classical world to European masters – the Louvre’s star attractions include the Mona Lisa, the Venus de Milo and the Winged Victory of Samothrace. The Galerie d’Apollon displays a selection of the French Crown Jewels.
The museum can draw up to 30,000 visitors a day.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP and AP)



