2025 - France,Louvre Museum,museum theft,Museum thefts,October 26,Paris,Sunday
No comments
Breakthrough in Louvre Crown Jewels Theft: Five New Arrests
Traced through DNA samples left on objects recovered at the crime scene and around the broken window used to access the museum's Apollon gallery and Beccuau's statements relayed more information about the two individuals, originally residents in Seine-Saint-Denis, presently in French custody.
The 34 year old suspect was arrested at 8:00 pm at Charles de Gaulle airport last Saturday, with a one-way ticket to Algeria. He is an Algerian-born resident living in Aubervilliers. Unemployed and known to the French police for a theft conviction as well as various traffic offences, he has lived in France since 2010 and once worked as a delivery driver and garbage man. His DNA traces was found on one of the scooters used in the thieves' getaway after the robbery.
The second 39 year old suspect was arrested the same night at around 8:40 p.m. He was born in Seine-Saint-Denis in the northern suburbs of Paris. An unlicensed taxi and delivery driver, he was taken into custody near his home in Aubervilliers. Like the first accomplice, he was already known to police for aggravated robberies committed in 2008 and 2014. At the time of his arrest this week, he was also under judicial supervision while awaiting trial for the charge of aggravated theft in Bobigny, a northeastern suburb of the French capital. He was tied to the robbery by DNA found on one of the broken display cases, as well as on objects abandoned as the thieves fled.
In talking about the case breakthroughs, the prosecutor clarified that there was no evidence that supported statements that this individual had plans to leave the country, dispelling earlier statements in news articles that said that this suspect was intent on leaving France for Mali.
Both of these suspects have been identified as the two individuals who road the lift elevator and entered into the museum to steal the jewels. Brought before French Magistrates on Wednesday, they have now been formally charged with organised robbery, which carries a sentence of fifteen years imprisonment and criminal conspiracy, which carries a sentence of ten years imprisonment.
Later last night, around 9 pm, Prosecutor Beccuau's office released a statement that five more suspects were apprehended by investigators from the Brigade for the Repression of Banditry (BRB) in connection the the museum heist in the swanky 16th (Marseille) and the impoverished 93rd arrondissement (Seine-Saint-Denis) of Paris. One of these is believed to have been another of the four alleged robbers who carried out the heist and who was linked to the robbery through DNA evidence.
For now the Paris prosecutor has indicated that the stolen jewellery "is not in our possession" and "I want to remain hopeful that they will be found and can be returned to the Louvre Museum and, more broadly, to the nation".
Further news is expected later this morning.
