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Hunt continues for thieves after priceless jewels stolen in heist at Louvre museum in Paris – live updates

4 hours ago
Hunt continues for thieves after priceless jewels stolen in heist at Louvre museum in Paris – live updates
Originally posted by: BBC.com

Source: BBC.com

  • ‘They swept us out of the gallery’published at 16:43 BST

    Jim and Joan Carpenter, American tourists, speaking to a reporter in the street beside the Seine.Image source, Reuters

    American tourists Jim and Joan Carpenter were inside the Louvre museum this morning, when security guards urged them to leave.

    “We were just ready to go in to see the Mona Lisa when they swept us out of the gallery,” Joan tells Reuters news agency.

    The couple say they were ushered down the stairs, past the Apollo Gallery – where the robbery took place – and out through an emergency exit that looked like it was rarely used.

    Jim says there was “lots of confusion” in the museum, and guards just told the couple there were “technical difficulties” when they asked what was going on.

    “I knew something was up because of the way they swept the whole museum,” says Joan.

    “But it’s great,” Jim adds. “This is our last day of a long trip and it’s the most exciting part today.”

  • Watch: ‘Quick, brazen theft’, reports BBC Paris correspondentpublished at 16:21 BST

    The BBC’s Paris correspondent Andrew Harding is at the scene of the heist as police investigate.

    Click play below to watch his report.

    Media caption,

    ‘An embarrassment’: BBC reports from scene of Louvre robbery

  • Smashed window among latest pictures from the scenepublished at 16:13 BST

    Investigations are continuing in Paris after thieves broke into the Louvre and stole a number of items of jewellery.

    Much of the authorities’ attention has been centred on a small truck parked next to the museum – with a ladder stretched out to a first-floor balcony.

    Here are the latest images coming to us from France.

    The robbers are believed to have used a furniture hoist in order to gain access to the balconyImage source, Getty Images

    The basin of the ladder has been forensically checked by authorities for cluesImage source, Reuters

    A window believed to have been used in what the French Interior Ministry saidImage source, Reuters

    Police car in paris with its door open as an officer in a white hazmat suit patrols the areaImage source, Getty Images

  • Who was Empress Eugenie – the wife of Napoleon III?published at 16:02 BST

    A black and white photo of Eugenie wearing a black jacket looking down solemnlyImage source, Getty Images

    Image caption,

    Empress Eugenie during her exile in England in around 1875

    According to French media reports, authorities have recovered a damaged crown near the Louvre which reportedly belonged to Empress Eugenie.

    Born in Granada, Spain, in 1826, Empress Eugenie married Napoleon III, who ruled France as president from 1848 to 1852 and emperor from 1852 until 1870, when he was overthrown.

    Napoleon III then spent the last three years of his life in exile in England, with Empress Eugenie and his only son, after he was captured and deposed during the Franco-Prussian war.

    When his son – also Napoleon – died in 1879, Empress Eugenie built a monastery and imperial mausoleum in Farnborough.

    Empress Eugenie was entombed to the imperial crypt at St Michael’s Abbey after she died in 1920.

  • Authorities retrieve crown belonging to Napoleon III’s wife Eugenie – reportspublished at 15:34 BST

    Earlier, we reported comments from Culture Minister Rachida Dati who said one stolen item had been found near the Louvre as the thieves made their getaway.

    Several French media outlets are reporting that the item is a 19th Century crown belonging to Empress Eugenie and has been found broken.

    Eugenie was the wife of Napoleon III, who ruled France in that era.

    According to Louvre’s website, the crown features golden eagles and is covered in 1,354 diamonds and 56 emeralds.

  • Interior minister says French museums in general are ‘vulnerable’published at 15:04 BST

    Hugh Schofield
    Paris correspondent

    As we reported earlier, thefts from the Louvre are uncommon due to the museum’s tight security.

    However, Interior Minister Laurent Nunez said in an interview earlier today that it was “well-known” that French museums in general are “vulnerable”.

    Two recent thefts have been in the news. In September, thieves took gold worth €600,000 from the Museum of Natural History in Paris.

    In the same month, the Museum of Porcelain in Limoges was broken into, and items worth €6.5m taken.

  • Watch: Crowds evacuate Louvre after heistpublished at 14:25 BST

    Media caption,

    Louvre crowds evacuate after museum robbery

    As we have been reporting, the heist took place at about 09:30 local time (08:30 BST) – just half an hour after the museum had opened its doors to the public.

    This meant large numbers of visitors had to be evacuated after the museum announced it would close.

    You can see some of the confusion near the Louvre’s famous pyramid entrance in the video above.

  • Analysis

    How common are thefts from the Louvre?published at 13:59 BST

    Hugh Schofield
    Paris Correspondent

    Thefts from the museum are rare, thanks to its tightsecurity, but they have happened – most famously in 1911when Leonardo de Vinci’s masterpiece the Mona Lisa was taken.

    Poet Guillaume Apollinaire and painter Pablo Picasso wereboth questioned by police. But, the culprit turned out to be an Italianman who – out of a sense of national pride – wanted the painting brought backto Italy.

    It was found three years later in Florence and returned to Paris. At the time the painting was not as famous as it is now.

    Separately, in 1983 someitems of 16th century armour disappeared and were onlyrediscovered in 2011.

    Most recently, a painting by the 19thcentury artist Camille Corot was taken in 1998. Le Chemin de Sevres(The Sevres Road) was simply removed from the wall without anyone seeing. Thetheft prompted an important overhaul of security. It has never been found.

    The Salle Mollien in the Musee du LouvreImage source, Getty Images

  • Police continue to probe heist as new details emergepublished at 13:31 BST

    Police Crime scene officers work at the foot of a furniture elevator used in a robbery at the Louvre MuseumImage source, Getty Images

    If you’re just joining us, the authorities in France say priceless jewellery has been stolen from the Louvre museum in Paris this morning. This is what we now know:

    • Thieves broke into the museum at about 09:30 local time (08:30 BST) – shortly before the attraction opened to visitors – and has been shut for the day as a result
    • Paris’s prosecutor’s office added it had opened an investigation into the “theft of jewellery”
    • The thieves are thought to have gained entry via an upstairs window after using a type of mechanised lift to access the first-floor, writes the BBC’s Paris correspondent Andrew Harding
    • Interior Minister Laurent Nunez says three or four thieves were able to open two display cases and left the scene on motorbikes
    • Culture Minister Rachida Dati told French TV that in their haste to flee, one stolen item was found underneath the Louvre
    • The targeted gallery – in the museum’s south side – holds what remains of France’s crown jewels

    We are staying across the situation and will bring you updates as we get them.

  • Stolen item found near where heist took place, minister tells French TVpublished at 13:14 BST

    Breaking

    A ladder is seen with scientific police working beneath it at the Louvre museumImage source, Getty Images

    French Culture Minister Rachida Dati has just given an interview to French TV station TF1 where she says that an item of stolen jewellery has been found.

    The piece was found near the scene of the heist, apparently after having been dropped. Dati says it is “being assessed”. There has been no official confirmation of what the item is.

    Describing the thieves, the minister says they “acted professionally, without any violence and without any panic”.

  • Analysis

    What is in the Louvre’s Apollo gallery?published at 12:40 BST

    Hugh Schofield
    Paris Correspondent

    The Gallery of Apollo, which the thieves are said to have targeted, houses what is left of the Frenchcrown jewels.

    These were largely lost or sold after the French Revolution, butsome precious items remained.

    Pieces housed there included those acquired after the Revolutionfor the Emperor Napoleon, his nephew Napoleon III, and their wives theempresses Marie-Louise and Eugenie.

    The Louvre’s website says that themost precious items in the gallery were three diamonds known as the Regent, theSancy and the Hortensia.

    The painted ceilings of Apollo gallery at the Louvre Museum.Image source, AFP via Getty Images

  • Watch: Police and staff usher confused crowds away from Louvrepublished at 12:23 BST

    As we have been reporting, the Louvre in Paris has been shut for the day following a heist in the world- famous museum.

    The authorities are investigating as details about exactly what happen continue to emerge.

    Police and museum staff have also been having to deal with large crowds of people who have been affected by the sudden closure of the very popular tourist destination.

  • Police focus on ladder placed against the side of the Louvrepublished at 12:09 BST

    Andrew Harding
    Paris correspondent, at the scene

    This photograph shows a furniture elevator propped up against a side of LouvreImage source, Getty Images

    French police have sealed off access to the Louvre museum,including one major road along the riverbank in front of it.

    The focus of the investigation is on the south-east corner of thebuilding, overlooking the River Seine.

    A large, extendable ladder is visible, the sort of thing you might see on a fire engine or roofing company’svehicle.

    It is mounted onto a mechanised lift, the type used all around Paris todeliver furniture to apartments on upper floors.

    The top of the ladder touches a balcony, which appears to behow the three thieves accessed one of the upper floors.

    I have spoken to the mayor of the local area who can’t confirm whether the ladder was already there for maintenance work, or whether the thieves deliberately placed it there.

    The area around is full of tourists milling about unable toaccess the Louvre anymore on what is an overcast day.

  • Value of stolen items ‘incalculable’, interior ministry sayspublished at 11:56 BST

    Hugh Schofield
    Paris Correspondent

    We are now getting more details about how the robbery unfolded.

    The French Interior Ministry says that at around 09:30 local time (08:30 BST) a number of individuals got into the Apollo Gallery via a window, which they broke.

    Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez says three or four thieves involved used a goods lift on a truck outside the building.

    Once inside, the thieves stole jewels that were in display cases and then left on motorbikes. Nunez says the robbery took seven minutes.

    A precise list of what was stolen is being drawn up.

    Beyond their commercial value, the ministry says the items have an incalculable historical and cultural value.

    French police officers stand next to a furniture elevator outside the Louvre MuseumImage source, Getty Images

    Image caption,

    French police officers stand next to a furniture elevator outside the Louvre Museum

  • Damage being assessed after robbery, says public prosecutorpublished at 11:36 BST

    Forensic police officers arrive at the Louvre museum after reports of a robberyImage source, Reuters

    The Parisian Public Prosecutor’s Office confirms it has opened an investigation into suspected “organised theft and criminal conspiracy to commit a crime”.

    It confirms there has been a “theft of jewellery” at the Louvre and that the investigation is being supported by an investigative service that fights illegal trafficking of cultural goods.

    “The damage iscurrently being assessed,” the prosecutor’s office says. “Investigations are ongoing.”

  • What is the Louvre?published at 11:15 BST

    Image source, Getty Images

    Located in Paris, the Louvre is the largest museum in the world with nearly 73,000 square metres of exhibition space – more than the size of ten football pitches.

    It was originally built in 1546 as a palace for the French royal family. King Francis I, its first resident, was a lover of art and intended the Louvre to showcase his collection.

    Subsequent kings greatly expanded the crown’s art holdings, with Louis XIV even acquiring the art collection of English King Charles I, after his execution in the English Civil War.

    The collection remained mainly private until the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789, and in 1793 the Louvre opened as a public art gallery.

    Today, the Louvre displays more than 35,000 works of art – including the famous Mona Lisa painting by Leonardo da Vinci – and attracts around 30,000 daily visitors.

    Image source, Getty Images

  • Thieves escaped on a scooter with nine items of jewellerypublished at 10:51 BST

    Breaking

    Hugh Schofield
    Paris Correspondent

    Details are sketchy but French media are reporting that three masked men broke into the Louvre shortly after opening time this morning.

    They’re said to have used a goods lift to get access to the Apollo Gallery, on the Seine River side of the museum.

    This ornate room is where what remains of France’s crown jewels are kept.

    The thieves are said to have been carrying small chainsaws.

    They made off with nine items of jewellery and they escaped on a motor-scooter. The value of the haul is being evaluated.

  • Social media footage shows people stuck inside the Louvrepublished at 10:46 BST

    Footage on social media appears to show security and members of the public locked inside the Louvre museum following the robbery.

    One person writes on X: “Just got to the Louvre and can see the security are locked inside! Everyone at the gates is being told that they cannot go in and that it is shut for today.”

    Grey gates are closed at the entrance to LouvreImage source, X / @whatyouthinktom

    Image caption,

    Gates appeared to be closed at the museum

  • What we know – and what we don’t know – about the robbery at the Louvrepublished at 10:35 BST

    If you’re just joining us, France’s Culture Minister, Rachida Dati, says there has been a robbery at the world-famous Louvre museum in Paris.

    Here’s what we know so far:

    • The incident took place this morning as the museum opened
    • There are no injuries, she says
    • The police are at the museum and an investigation is under way
    • A statement from the Louvre says it will remain closed for the day due to “exceptional reasons”

    And here’s what we don’t yet know:

    • We don’t know what – if anything – has been taken from the museum
    • We do not know yet who was involved in the incident
    • It’s also unclear how the robbery occurred

    We’ll keep monitoring the situation and bring you updates as we receive them.

  • Louvre says museum shut today ‘for exceptional reasons’published at 10:22 BST

    The Louvre museum is closed amid preparations for the Olympic Opening Ceremony in ParisImage source, Reuters

    The Louvre Museum has posted on its official X account to say it “will remain closed today for exceptional reasons.”

    It is not yet clear what, if anything, has been taken from the museum.

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