The audacious daytime robbery of historical jewels worth $102 million from the Paris Louvre Museum on October 19th was executed by petty criminals, rather than professionals from the world of organized crime, said the Paris prosecutor.
On a Sunday morning, on October 19th, two men parked a movers’ lift outside the Louvre, rode up to the second story, smashed a window, cracked open display cases with angle grinders, and then fled on the back of scooters driven by two accomplices in a heist lasting less than seven minutes.
With three of the four suspected thieves now believed to be in custody and the jewels still missing, authorities say their profiles do not resemble those of Ocean’s Eleven-style professional gangsters but rather those of small-time criminals from the hardscrabble northern suburbs of Paris. “This is not quite everyday delinquency, but it is a type of delinquency that we do not generally associate with the upper echelons of organized crime,” said Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau on Franceinfo radio.
Suspects “Clearly Local People,” Prosecutor Says
Laure Beccuau said the profiles of the four in custody so far – including the girlfriend of one of the suspected robbers – were not typical of organized crime professionals who could carry out such sophisticated operations. “They are clearly local. They all live more or less in Seine-Saint-Denis,” she said of a low-income area north of Paris. French Interior Minister Laurent Nunez told French daily Le Parisien he believed the one suspect still at large was probably the organizer of the heist.
French media have speculated that the robbers were amateurs, as they dropped the most precious of the jewels – Empress Eugenie’s crown, made of gold, emerald, and diamonds – during their flight, left tools, a glove, and other items at the scene, and failed to set fire to the movers’ truck before fleeing. A week after the raid, police arrested two men suspected of being the ones who broke into the Louvre – a 34-year-old Algerian who has lived in France since 2010. He was detained by police as he tried to board a flight to Algeria, and a 39-year-old was already under judicial supervision for aggravated theft.
Both live in Aubervilliers, northern Paris, and have “partially admitted” their involvement, Beccuau said last week. Two other suspects, a 37-year-old man and a 38-year-old woman, were arrested on October 29, opened a new tab and charged on Saturday.
“At Least” One Person Is Still Missing From the Heist Group
Beccuau said the 37-year-old man was believed to be part of the four-man group that carried out the heist, based on DNA found in the moving truck. She said he had a record of 11 criminal convictions for a range of offences, including traffic-related offences, aggravated theft, and an attempt to break into an automated teller machine. She added that he was in a relationship with the 38-year-old woman and that they have children together. He and one of the two other men arrested had been convicted of the same robbery in 2015. Traces of the woman’s DNA were also found in the movers’ truck, but Beccuau said they appeared to have been transferred into the truck, possibly by a person or an object later placed in the vehicle.
The prosecutor’s office said on Saturday that both deny involvement in the heist. BFM television reported that the woman broke down in tears when she heard she would remain in custody, and cried, “I am afraid for my children, and for myself, I am afraid.” Her lawyer, Adrien Sorrentino, told BFM she denied all charges and that he would consider appealing her detention. Asked whether authorities believed that three of the four Louvre robbers were now under arrest. Beccuau said that “at least one person is still missing”. She did not rule out the possibility of other accomplices. Three people arrested along with the couple on October 29 have been freed without charge, the prosecutor’s office said on Saturday.























