PARIS — One week after four thieves swept through the Louvre in just seven minutes, the first arrests have been made in a case that exposed critical security weaknesses and wounded French pride, reports BritPanorama.
The robbers arrived early last Sunday with a furniture-lift truck, sliced through a window of the Galerie d’Apollon, threatened guards and smashed through two display cases, stealing eight of France’s crown jewels. The four suspects then sped off on scooters before police could respond.
Their take — necklaces, tiaras, and brooches once worn by France’s long-departed royals and worth an estimated 88 million euros ($102.63 million) — has left investigators racing against time to recover the missing pieces before they can be broken up and melted down or sold off.
The arrests were made on Saturday, with one man detained while “preparing to leave the country” from Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport, according to Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau. Two additional men were taken into custody on suspicion of organized theft and criminal conspiracy.
Yet, seven days on, the daring heist raises uncomfortable questions about how the world’s most visited museum was breached so easily. The thieves parked a monte-meubles — a truck mounted with a basket lift — and used it to access a second-floor balcony, seemingly without drawing the attention of police or security.
The presence of such manned vehicles on the streets outside the Louvre is not unusual, museum security officers noted. “Often there are window cleaners,” said Vanessa Michaux Valora, a security officer at the museum for 21 years and a SUD union representative. “Now we’re aware they no longer work at weekends, but at the time it didn’t look unusual.”
Julien Dunoyer, a security worker and union representative with two decades of experience at the museum, commented on ongoing work at a garden below the gallery, suggesting the elevator ladder was not unexpected. “That’s the problem with having lots of works in different locations,” he added.
Valora and Dunoyer mentioned they were working in different parts of the museum during the theft and were unaware a burglary had taken place when asked to evacuate people outside. “We were asking ourselves whether it could be an attack and we needed to make sure everyone was safe,” Valera stated. “We didn’t expect it to be so catastrophic. It’s extremely shocking. We’re really hurting.”
Louvre director Laurence des Cars told French senators that the theft had exposed “weaknesses” in security. “We did not detect the thieves’ arrival early enough,” she stated, attributing this to insufficient cameras monitoring the museum’s perimeter.
Following the theft, the SUD Culture labor union blamed the “destruction of jobs dedicated to security” and funding shortfalls for security equipment. Gallery attendants, ticket agents, and security personnel at the museum staged a brief walkout in June, protesting chronic understaffing and poor working conditions.
French President Emmanuel Macron announced a six-year renovation of the museum earlier this year, including funding for security upgrades.
For a nation whose character is defined by proud displays of history and culture, the incident is viewed in some quarters as a national humiliation. Macron labeled it “an attack on a heritage that we cherish because it is our history.” He vowed to “recover the works and the perpetrators will be brought to justice,” asserting, “everything is being done, everywhere, to achieve this.”
Alexandre Portier, the lawmaker leading the French parliament’s inquiry into the theft, remarked that the heist had left a “wound,” with rising fears that the treasures may never be seen again. “I worry that as we speak the jewels have already been dismantled, chopped up, and risk being altered,” Portier noted. “Even if we find all the elements, we couldn’t put back together the crowns and necklaces that were stolen.”
The stolen items “belong to mankind, as part of our common history,” he added, and “these may be lost, for all humanity.”