Paris authorities have apprehended suspects linked to the audacious theft of crown jewels from the Louvre Museum, as confirmed by the Paris prosecutor on Sunday. The arrests, made on Saturday evening, included one individual attempting to depart from Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport. While French media outlets BFM TV and Le Parisien reported two arrests, the prosecutor, Laure Beccuau, refrained from confirming the exact number or disclosing whether any stolen jewels had been recovered. The heist, which occurred last Sunday morning, saw thieves execute a meticulously planned operation in under eight minutes, making off with jewels valued at €88 million ($102 million). Utilizing a basket lift to scale the museum’s façade, the intruders forced open a window, shattered display cases, and fled with priceless Napoleonic-era treasures. The Louvre’s director lamented the incident as a “terrible failure.” Investigators from a specialized police unit dedicated to armed robberies, serious burglaries, and art thefts spearheaded the arrests. Beccuau expressed concern over premature information leaks, which could impede the efforts of over 100 investigators working to recover the stolen artifacts and apprehend all perpetrators. The Louvre has since reopened, but the theft has left a cultural wound likened to the 2019 Notre Dame Cathedral fire. Among the stolen items were a sapphire diadem, necklaces, earrings, and a reliquary brooch tied to 19th-century French royalty. One piece, Empress Eugénie’s emerald-set imperial crown, was discovered damaged but repairable outside the museum. The arrests have brought a sense of relief to Louvre visitors, though concerns remain about the recovery of the stolen jewels.
