Stolen jewellery from Louvre museum worth over $100 million, Paris prosecutor says as search continues | World News

People queue outside the Louvre museum in Paris on Monday although it remains closed for the day after Sunday’s jewels robbery. (AP Photo)
The jewellery stolen from the Louvre museum in Paris over the weekend has been valued at $102 million, according to a French prosecutor citing the museum’s curator as the search for the crown jewels continued, AP reported. Though the monetary estimate of the stolen treasure doesn’t include their horical value to France.
Prosecutor Laure Beccuau, whose office is leading the investigation, told RTL radio that the amount was “extraordinary” but it was a greater loss to France’s horical heritage. Among the items stolen were crown jewels and pieces gifted Napoleons to their wives, BBC reported.
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Prosecutor Beccuau said that about 100 prosecutors are now involved in the search for suspects and gems with the police after the theft on Sunday from one of the world’s most visited museums, AP reported. “The wrongdoers who took these gems won’t earn 88 million euros if they had the very bad idea of disassembling these jewels,” the prosecutor told RTL.
MOVIE HE AT THE LOUVRE Three thieves stole nine jewels belonging to Napoleon and Empress Eugenie. They allegedly entered through a construction zone, cut the windows, and stole the French crown jewels in seven minutes. They escaped on a motorcycle.pic.twitter.com/2BDWyYUDgC— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) October 19, 2025
Beccuau added, “We can perhaps hope that they’ll think about this and won’t destroy these jewels without rhyme or reason.” France’s culture miner informed on Tuesday that the security apparatus installed at the Louvre museum worked properly during the theft.
Thieves, who had power tools, reportedly took less than eight minutes to complete the loot and exit the venue shortly after the museum opened on Sunday morning. Experts fear that with thieves not being caught for more than two days now, the jewellery would now be long gone.
Responding to questions over the Louvre museum’s security, France’s Culture Miner Rachida Dati told lawmakers in the National Assembly that “The Louvre museum’s security apparatus did not fail, that is a fact. The Louvre museum’s security apparatus worked.”
Dati further told lawmakers that she has launched a separate adminrative inquiry in addition to police investigation in order to ascertain full transparency in what happened at the museum during the he.
(with inputs from AP)
