Louvre on lockdown: Jewel thieves strike Paris museum

Louvre Museum & Jewelry thieves' basket lift
Louvre Museum & Jewelry thieves' basket lift

In just seven minutes, the Louvre lost priceless jewelry in what officials deem a highly organised, near-cinematic heist.

The morning looked just like any other day when the light hit the glass pyramid of the world’s most visited museum – but by 9:30 a.m., that calm was shattered when the Galerie d’Apollon was struck by masked individuals.

A brazen raid

Details emerged quickly: three or four men arrived at the Seine-facing side of the Louvre, an area under construction.

They used a truck-mounted basket lift or ‘cherry picker’ to reach a window of the Apollon Gallery, which houses the French Crown Jewels – relics tied to emperors, queens, and France’s legacy.

Inside, they used angle grinders or chainsaws to breach reinforced glass cases.

Within minutes, they had snatched nine pieces of jewelry – reportedly crowns, tiaras, and brooches once belonging to Napoleon and Empress Eugénie – before escaping on scooters, one later found abandoned nearby.

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The cultural cost

Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez described the operation as the work of “a team that had clearly scouted the location”.

Culture Minister Rachida Dati confirmed no one was injured, but the cultural shock, she said, is enormous.

Visitors caught in the evacuation described confusion and panic.

One witness recalled: “People were running, banging on glass doors… police and military officers arrived within minutes.”

The bold heist underscores concerns about the security and vulnerability of public heritage, especially at a time when museums are already facing overcrowding, staffing shortages, and budget strains.

This is not the first time that France’s prized cultural assets have been attacked either.

The Mona Lisa was stolen back in 1911, before being recovered three years later, and there have been other security scares across the country’s museums recently.

More than tiaras

For now, investigators are still looking for clues as the Louvre’s Apollon Gallery remains sealed off.

The museum, led by director Laurence des Cars, must now confront not only the theft but its broader implications – a breach of trust in an institution that stands as a guardian of global culture.

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By Levi Mora

Levi has been writing for KVH Media Group since earning her Journalism degree from the Polytechnic University of the Philippines in 2016. She also works as a journalist for a child-focused nonprofit, telling stories through words, photos, and video.

Off the clock, she collects “side quests” like achievements: gaming, photography, powerlifting, badminton, and voice lessons — because who has time to be idle?

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