Louvre
heist puts pressure on French government over museum security
Justice
minister says ‘we have failed’ after thieves take seven minutes to steal
priceless jewels from museum
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris
Mon 20
Oct 2025 09.41 BST
The
French government is under increasing pressure over museum security as police
continue to search for thieves who took seven minutes to steal priceless jewels
from the Louvre, the world’s most-visited museum.
“What is
certain is that we have failed, since people were able to park a furniture
hoist in the middle of Paris, get people up it in several minutes to grab
priceless jewels, and give France a terrible image,” the justice minister,
Gérald Darmanin, told France Inter radio on Monday.
Police
were working to discover what level of organised criminals had been involved in
the highly professional raid, he said. A team of 60 investigators is working on
the theory that the raid was planned and executed by an organised crime group.
A gang of
four thieves used the hoist to access an outside window in full daylight when
the museum was open to visitors on Sunday morning.
The men
used a truck with an extendable ladder like those used by furniture movers in
order to get access to the Apollon gallery, the gilded room that houses the
royal collection and crown jewels. They used cutting equipment to get in
through a window and open the display cases, taking jewels from two cases in
the ornate gallery that is one of the most-visited rooms in the museum. Some
were dressed in hi-vis jackets like builders.
The
masked thieves stole nine 19th-century items of jewellery, one of which – the
crown of the Empress Eugénie – they dropped and damaged as they made their
escape. It is covered in 1,354 diamonds and 56 emeralds.
Darmanin
said questions could be asked about why the museum’s windows were not secured.
The far
right called the theft “a humiliation” for France. “How far will the
disintegration of the state go?” said the National Rally party leader, Jordan
Bardella, on social media, calling the heist “an unbearable humiliation for our
country”.
After
several other robberies from French museums in recent months, the interior
minister, Laurent Nuñez, acknowledged that securing museums was a “major weak
spot”.
The
president, Emmanuel Macron, said on social media that everything was being done
to catch the perpetrators and recover the stolen treasures.
The
culture ministry said security alarms had gone off when the cases were opened
and museum security guards immediately enacted the security protocol. The
thieves fled, leaving behind some of their equipment.
As
questions were asked over whether enough had been done to secure the vast
museum, which has 35,000 works on display, trade unions said that, in general,
not enough investment was being made into staffing and security at French
cultural venues.
“The
collections aren’t safe, the visitors aren’t safe and the staff aren’t either,”
Yvan Navarroa co-secretary general of the culture branch of the leftwing CGT
union told France Info. He said cuts over recent years meant there was a lack
of security staffing for French culture and heritage.
France
Inter radio obtained a state auditor report due to published next month which
criticised “considerable” and “persistent” delays in updating equipment at the
Louvre and warned that security cameras were lacking in many rooms.
France
Inter reported that when the Louvre’s director, Laurence des Cars, took over in
2021, she had asked the Paris police for a security audit. The current project
for a major overhaul of the Louvre includes heightened security measures.

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