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UPDATE: Paris, France- Five more arrested in Louvre heist investigation as stolen crown jewels worth $102M still missing

Paris, France – Five more suspects have been arrested in connection with the daring daytime heist of the French crown jewels from the Louvre Museum, French investigators announced Thursday, though the priceless treasures remain missing.

Police carried out the arrests in separate operations across Paris and neighboring areas, including the Seine-Saint-Denis region, prosecutor Laure Beccuau told RTL radio. The identities of the suspects have not been released.

One of the newly arrested individuals is suspected of being part of the four-person team that stormed the Louvre’s Apollo Gallery in broad daylight on Oct. 19, stealing jewels valued at 88 million euros ($102 million) in less than eight minutes.

“Searches last night and overnight did not allow us to find the goods,” Beccuau said.

LOUVRE HEIST ADDS TO HISTORY OF HIGH-PROFILE MUSEUM BREACHES, LEAVES OTHER GALLERIES ON EDGE

People walking in the courtyard of the Louvre Museum

People tour the courtyard of the Louvre Museum in the rain Monday, Oct. 27, 2025 in Paris. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)

Two other members of the team were arrested Sunday and given preliminary charges Wednesday of criminal conspiracy and theft committed by an organized gang. Beccuau said both have at least in part recognized their involvement in the heist.

One suspect, a 34-year-old Algerian national living in France since 2010, was arrested at Charles de Gaulle Airport attempting to flee to Algeria on a one-way ticket. He lived in the northern Paris suburb of Aubervilliers and was previously known to police for traffic violations. His DNA was recovered from a scooter used in the getaway.

Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau speaking

Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau speaks during a news conference at the Paris courthouse Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025, on the judicial investigation into the robbery at the Louvre Museum in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Emma Da Silva)

The second suspect, 39, was arrested at his home in Aubervilliers. He was known to police for multiple prior thefts. Investigators matched his DNA to a glass display case that held the stolen jewels, as well as to items the thieves left behind, the prosecutor added.

BRAZEN LOUVRE ROBBERY CREW MAY HAVE BEEN HIRED BY COLLECTOR, PROSECUTOR SAYS

The thieves used a basket lift to scale the museum’s exterior, forced open a window, and used cutting tools to open display cases in the Apollo Gallery. They escaped with eight historic pieces, including:

– A sapphire diadem, necklace, and earring set linked to Queens Marie-Amélie and Hortense

– An emerald necklace and earrings belonging to Empress Marie-Louise, Napoleon’s second wife

– A reliquary brooch

– Empress Eugénie’s diamond diadem and elaborate corsage-bow brooch

Eugénie’s emerald-encrusted crown – set with over 1,300 diamonds – was later found damaged but recoverable outside the museum.

Louvre Director Laurence des Cars acknowledged a “terrible failure” in museum security. However, Beccuau said there is no evidence the theft was an inside job.

police car parked outside Louvre Museum

A police car parks in the courtyard of the Louvre Museum, one week after the robbery, Sunday, Oct. 26, 2025 in Paris. (AP Photo/Thomas Padilla)

In a direct appeal to those holding the missing jewels, Beccuau on Wednesday night warned they are “unsellable” due to their historical significance and urged their return.

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“Anyone who buys them would be guilty of concealment of stolen goods,” she said. “There’s still time to give them back.”

Article provided by Fox News, click HERE to view.

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Pairs, France- Suspects arrested over brazen jewel theft from Paris’ Louvre museum.

Police have arrested suspects in connection with the theft of France’s crown jewels from the Louvre museum, just as one attempted to leave the country, the Paris prosecutor’s office said.

Thieves last week targeted the Louvre’s Apollo Gallery in a brazen daylight raid, fleeing with jewelry worth tens of millions in a matter of minutes.

Scores of investigators have been involved in chasing down those suspected of the heist, which Louvre director Laurence des Cars called a “terrible failure.” Last week, des Cars admitted to the French Senate that no security cameras were monitoring the gallery’s second-floor balcony when the thieves broke in using an angle grinder.

French media first broke the news of the arrests, with CNN affiliate BFMTV reporting that two men in their thirties and known to police were detained on Saturday evening local time.

Authorities were able to track down the individuals after analyzing more than 150 samples of DNA left at the scene, BFMTV reported. Both men are from the Parisian suburb of Aubervilliers, where one of them was arrested, it added, while two others suspected of being involved in the heist remain at large.

Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuau said that “one of the men arrested was preparing to leave the territory from Roissy airport,” also known as Charles de Gaulle airport, near Paris. BFMTV reported, citing sources, that he was arrested during a passport check before he could board an evening flight to Algeria.

The stolen jewels – comprising nine items including an emerald necklace set among more than 1,000 diamonds gifted by Napoleon to his second wife – were not recovered when the two arrests were made, BFMTV said.

France’s Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez congratulated the investigators for the arrests, who he said “have worked tirelessly, as I asked them to, and who have always had my full confidence.”

Thieves raided the Apollo Gallery on the Louvre’s upper floor last weekend, which houses the French Crown Jewels. They used a truck-mounted ladder to gain access to the gallery, one of the most ornate rooms in the museum, through a window.

In the course of a seven-minute heist, they broke into two high-security display cases and stole nine items, according to France’s culture ministry. Among the items taken was a diamond and sapphire jewelry set including a tiara and necklace worn by Queen Marie-Amélie and Queen Hortense.

The jewelry taken from the museum is estimated to be worth 88 million euros ($102 million), Beccuau previously told French radio station RTL. Around 100 investigators have been involved in the manhunt to track down those responsible for the heist, she said.

Following the daylight robbery, French Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin admitted that the heist exposed security failings at France’s most famous museum.

“One can wonder about the fact that, for example, the windows hadn’t been secured, about the fact that a basket lift was on a public road,” he said on France Inter radio. “What is certain is that we have failed.”

Louve

Paris, France – Where the jewels stolen from the Louvre Museum might end up.

NEW YORK (AP) — Just days after a stunning heist at the Louvre Museum in Paris, speculation is growing around where the lavish, stolen jewels that once adorned France’s royals might end up.

A handful of experts warn that the artifacts valued at more than $100 million (88 million euros) could soon — if not already — be melted or broken into parts. If done successfully, some say those smaller pieces could later go up for sale as part of a new necklace, earrings or other jewelry, without turning too many heads.

“You don’t even have to put them on a black market, you just put them in a jewelry store,” said Erin Thompson, an art crime professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. “It could be sold down the street from the Louvre.”

Thompson and others say that this has become increasingly common with stolen jeweled and metal goods, noting that it’s a way thieves can try to cover their tracks and make money. It’s not like someone could publicly wear one of France’s Crown Jewels stolen on Sunday Ã¢â‚¬â€ and finding a market to sell the full artifacts would be incredibly difficult after “everyone and their sister” has seen photos of them over the last week, said Christopher Marinello, a lawyer and founder of Art Recovery International.

The jewels may be hard to monetize

“By breaking them apart, they will hide their theft,” Marinello said, adding that these items could become even more “traceless” if they’re taken out of France and through jewel cutters and robust supply chains in other countries.

Still, such pieces are often sold for a fraction of the value of what was stolen — due to their smaller size, but also because melting or breaking down high-profile items removes the historical worth.

It isn’t a simple process.

“The real art in an art heist isn’t the stealing, it’s the selling,” explained Robert Wittman, former senior investigator of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s art crime team. Wittman, who has since formed his own private practice, said that the individuals behind such heists are typically “better criminals or thieves than they are businessmen.”

Unlike others, Wittman is skeptical about Sunday’s thieves successfully monetizing the artifacts they stole from the Louvre — which include an emerald necklace and earrings, two crowns, two brooches, a sapphire necklace and a single earring worn by 19th-century royals. He notes the gems may still be identifiable by their clarity, for example, and gold that was refined when the pieces were made hundreds of years ago is not as pure as what’s typically in demand today.

“Because of what they are, there’s really no point destroying them,” Wittman said, while pointing to the risks of selling such high-profile stolen goods.

Scott Guginsky, executive vice president of the Jewelers’ Security Alliance, a nonprofit trade association focused on preventing jewelry crime, also notes the age and quality of the artifacts’ diamonds. He suspects they’re probably not graded.

“It’s not something that you can move on the open market. It’s nothing that can go through an auction house,” said Guginsky, who used to run the New York Police Department’s organized theft squad.

Given the amount of preparation that the thieves likely put into this, Guginsky believes they have a plan for selling the jewels, even if they might first decide to “sit on” the jewelry and wait out suspicion.

“I can’t see them stealing it without having an idea what they want to do,” he said. “There’s always a person willing to buy stolen jewelry. No matter what it is, somebody will buy it.”

Sara Yood, CEO and general counsel of the Jewelers Vigilance Committee, notes most jewelry businesses implement anti-money laundering programs and look out for red flags like unusual orders, repeated purchases and requests for secrecy.

Still, she and others say the age of some jewels — if broken down effectively — could actually make it harder to track. Newer gemstones, for example, sometimes carry a laser inscription inside that can be evaluated in a lab. But “because these are historical pieces, it’s rather unlikely that it has those identifying features,” noted Yood.

Experts like Thompson say bigger gems can be recut to a point that they’re unrecognizable. A challenge is finding people who have the skill to do that and don’t ask too many questions — but it’s possible, she said.

Whether the people behind Sunday’s heist had those contacts or certain buyers lined up is unknown. But it’s important to also note that “the guys who actually enter the museums are usually all hired hands, and they’re almost always caught in these cases,” Thompson added.

Chances of recovery look dim

She and others say that museums have increasingly faced a rash of similar thefts over recent years. Thompson notes that stealing from storage can go undetected for longer: the British Museum in London, which has accused a former curator of stealing artifacts and selling them online, is still trying to recover some of the 2,000 items stolen.

Some past thieves have made ransom demands for stolen artwork overall, or wait for a potential “no questions asked” reward from an insurance company — which can amount to about a 10% cut for some insured pieces in Europe, Thompson says. The jewels stolen from the Louvre Sunday, however, were reportedly not privately insured.

Sometimes government offers of a reward for information about a high-profile heist can also quicken the investigation, although the French government has yet to publicize such an incentive. If that changes, or promising leads are uncovered from the evidence left behind at the Louvre, experts like Wittman note it could increase the chances of recovering the artifacts.

Still, as more time passes, others feel that the fate of finding the historic jewels looks dim.

“I think they’re going to catch the criminals,” said Marinello. “But I don’t think they’ll find them with the jewels intact.”

Article provided AP News, By  WYATTE GRANTHAM-PHILIPS and R.J. RICO. Click HERE to view article.

Jewelry Supplier Benefits and Membership Sign up Form

Explore the benefits of becoming a jewelry supplier member of JSA. The following table lists the benefits with their corresponding membership level. The sign up form is further below.

JSA Membership – Responsive Table (v2)
MEMBERSHIP LEVELS
Benefits Basic Leader Champion Hero
Weekly Crime Alerts on Crime Trends, Wanted Suspects, Security Advice, and Text Alerts ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓
Listing of Products and Services on JSA’s Security Directory ✓ ✓ ✓
Advertising Opportunities on JSA’s Website and Crime Alerts ✓ ✓
Sponsorship of JSA Events ✓
Membership Fees $1,000 $2,500 $5,000 $10,000

Retailer Benefits and Membership Sign up Form

Explore the benefits of becoming a retail member of JSA. The following table lists the benefits with their corresponding membership level. The sign up form is further below.

JSA Membership – Responsive Table (Horizontal Scroll)
MEMBERSHIP LEVELS
Benefits Basic Elite Leader Champion Hero
Weekly Crime Alerts on Crime Trends, Wanted Suspects, and Security Advice ✓✓✓✓✓
Digital Jewelry Security Manual ✓✓✓✓✓
Phone Support in Response to Crime Situations (Business Hours) ✓✓✓✓✓
Phone Support in Response to Security Issues ✓✓✓✓
Post Crime Notification To Law Enforcement Agencies ✓✓✓✓
Reward Offered For Appropriate Cases ✓✓✓
Security Consulting ✓✓
Two Complimentary Invitations To JSA’s Annual Luncheon ✓
Recognition In Print Materials At Annual Luncheon And Online ✓
Base Cost for One Location $300 $1,000 $2,500 $5,000 $10,000
Cost for Additional Locations $100 $100

Please note: If you are insured by Jewelers Mutual, basic membership is complimentary. Each additional membership tier would be discounted by $200 off the price of annual membership.

Boomerang Carnets

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8715 Cary Algonquin Road, 2nd FL
Cary, IL 60013-2401
USA
Fax: 847-381-3857
Phone: 800-ATA-2900
Contact: Monika Jadeszko, V.P. Global Carnet Operations
Email: Carnets@ATACarnet.com
Website: ATACarnet.com

UK:
c/o Nexus Underwriting
52-56 Leadenhall St., London EC3A 2EB
England
Fax: 001-847-381-3857
Phone: 0808 189 3400
Contact: Monika Jadeszko, V.P. Global Carnet Operations
Email: carnets@boomerangcarnets.co.uk
Website: boomerangcarnets.co.uk

police tape

Jeweler, his pregnant wife, and daughter experience home invasion robbery

Miami-Dade County, FL – March 17, 2025 – A jeweler with a large following on social media believes it may have led to a home invasion at his residence. Around midnight on March 13, 2025, three armed and masked male subjects forced the jeweler into his home with his pregnant wife and daughter. Watch the video below to learn what happened next.

If you have any information regarding this incident or the subjects involved, please contact the Jewelers’ Security Alliance at jsa2@jewelerssecurity.org or 212-687-0328.

Burglary Suspects

Three suspects sentenced to prison following arrests for string of burglaries

Burglary Suspects

Muskingum County, Ohio – On December 10, 2024, the Muskingum County Prosecutor’s Office issued a press release announcing that three suspects have been sentenced for their role in a series of burglaries at jewelry stores. The press release is below. Click here to read additional information about the suspects’ arrest. The three suspects are pictured above.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, December 10, 2024
Multi-State Multimillion-Dollar Jewel Thieves Sentenced to Prison
Three thieves running a multimillion-dollar, multi-state jewel theft ring were sentenced to prison for their crimes.

On December 5, Pedro Garcia, 44, of Los Angeles, California, appeared in Muskingum County Court of Common Pleas for sentencing.

Judge Kelly Cottrill sentenced Garcia to serve 14 years in prison.

Rafael Flores Hernandez, 39, and Reyes Higuera, 51, were sentenced on December 9. Hernandez will serve up to 16½ years in prison. Higuera will serve up to 14 years behind bars.

At earlier hearings, Hernandez, Higuera, and Garcia all pleaded guilty to felony engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity and felony aggravated theft.

Hernandez and Higuera are illegal aliens from Mexico and have been deported from the United States multiple times. Garcia is a legal resident from California.

The thieves’ multimillion-dollar crime spree case began in May 2023 in Illinois when they broke into a jewelry store. The bandits smashed jewelry cases and used large plastic totes to haul away the jewelry.

Garcia and the other thieves robbed more jewelry stores between May 2023 and August 2024 in Illinois, Maryland, Kentucky, North Carolina, Indiana, Ohio, and Georgia. Each robbery lasted about two minutes.

Forsythe County, Georgia Sheriff’s Department Detective Caleb Martin was assigned the case, conducting a dogged one-man nationwide manhunt for the crew.

Determined to see the bandits brought to justice, Det. Martin worked tirelessly along with the Jewelers’ Security Alliance, an industry safety association, to track down details of other thefts, watch surveillance videos, and coordinate intelligence from other agencies.

His efforts were rewarded by being appointed to a Federal Bureau of Investigations task force allowing him to continue his investigation of the bandits.

Over the next several months, Martin contacted multiple law enforcement agencies and warned them that the trio was targeting stores in their area, but the thieves remained on the loose until they came to Zanesville.

In July, Martin contacted the Muskingum County Sheriff’s Office about the theft ring. The Sheriff’s Office took immediate action, using advanced technology to track the thieves and monitor their whereabouts.

Over a two-week period, officers from the Sheriff’s Office and Zanesville Police Department began intensive surveillance of their movements, locally and in Columbus.

A tracker was installed on the suspects’ car. Detectives informed the local business, whose franchises had been repeatedly targeted by the trio. Officers began watching the jewelry store, waiting for the thieves to strike.

Finally, around 4:00 a.m. on August 1, the three robbers broke into their target. During this break-in, they were caught in the act. Working with other law enforcement agencies, officers from the Zanesville Police Department and Muskingum County Sheriff’s Office were waiting nearby and moved in to capture the trio of bandits after they had smashed jewelry display cases and loaded more than $170,000 of jewelry into their totes.

The three men are suspects in more than twenty similar jewelry store smash-and-grab thefts in the Southeast and Midwest United States.

In total, Garcia and the crew stole more than $3 million of jewels.

Muskingum County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney John Litle says cooperation between local and out-of-state law enforcement agencies made it possible to help keep the community safe by catching Garcia and the other thieves.

“It was a real pleasure to work on this case and see the ‘all hands on deck’ cooperation between local and out-of-state law enforcement, in order to catch these thieves,” Litle said. “Everyone involved in this case went the extra mile to protect not only our local businesses; but businesses nationwide.”

Litle says the imprisonment of the jewel thieves should send a message to other criminals thinking about coming to Muskingum County.

“Once again, Judge Cottrill’s sentences demonstrate that Muskingum County is not the place to commit crime,” Litle said.

Click here to see the source of the press release.

JSA Logo

Criminals Targeting Gold Jewelry More as Value Soars, JSA Says

By Rob Bates | December 13, 2024

As the price of gold has soared past $2,500 an ounce (and continues to hover around $2,700), criminals are increasingly targeting stores that sell gold jewelry, says Scott Guginsky, executive vice president of the Jewelers’ Security Alliance (JSA).

“Gold is the most desirable thing to steal right now,” Guginsky tells JCK. “It’s more desirable than engagement rings. Sometimes it’s even more desirable than watches. Criminals pay attention to the fact that it’s approaching $3,000 an ounce.”

Gold is also appealing to criminals because its origin can be difficult to determine, says Guginsky.

“It’s untraceable, even more than diamonds or watches,” he says. “You steal it, and within minutes you can melt it down in the Diamond District. When it’s fenced to the right people, it disappears, and they sometimes get 90%-95% of its value.”

Asian, Middle Eastern, and Indian retailers that specialize in gold are getting hit in particular, Guginsky says, pointing to two robberies in New York City last weekend.

Here are tips for jewelers from Guginsky and from Carrie Volp, vice president for commercial lines operations at industry insurer Jewelers Mutual, on protecting stores and inventory:

Control your environment.

“Put buzzers on your doors,” he says. “Put laminated glass out on your front windows. You want to make it harder for the crooks to get in.”

Don’t display too much merchandise.

While all inventory should be put away every night, Guginsky says to be careful during the day, too.

“Try to limit the amount of gold you have outside of your safe,” he says. “Jewelers get a lot of extra inventory for the holidays—you don’t have to show it all.”

Maintain good relations with local police.

“It’s better to be proactive than reactive,” says Guginsky. “Educate law enforcement about what’s going on. A lot of times these local police departments have no idea about what’s happening nationwide.”

Train employees on what to watch for and do.

“Make sure that your staff is trained on casing behaviors, store security protocols, and that they have a code word in the event of an incident at the store,” says Volp. “The rush of the holidays can cause security to take a backseat. Now more than ever is when it is needed.”

Hire security guards.

“Security is a deterrent,” he says. “Retired police or off-duty police are the best for security.”

Never resist during a robbery.

“Gold can be replaced, but your well-being and your store’s well-being can’t,” Guginsky says.

Consult your insurance provider.

Volp recommends: “Consider a conversation with your insurance representative regarding the valuation provisions in your policy. Your insurance representative can also provide advice about required inventory records should a claim arise.”

For additional tips as well as crime bulletins, see the JSA website.

Click here to read the source for this article.

Hammer

5 Masked Subjects Commit Smash and Grab in Mall

Temple, TX – On December 12, 2024, at 7:54 p.m., a jewelry store experienced a smash & grab robbery. Upon entry into the store, five subjects proceeded towards the back of the store where one of the subjects used a large rock to smash the clearance bridal case.

After grabbing multiple bridal rings, all subjects proceeded to exit the store. The Temple Police Department was notified whereupon an investigation was initiated. There were no reported injuries

Subject Descriptions: 5 Black Males wearing all black, black hoodies, masks, and gloves.

The subjects are pictured below.

Image of Robber Second Image of Robber Third image of robbersFourth image of robbers

If you have any information regarding these subjects, please contact the Jewelers’ Security Alliance at jsa2@jewelerssecurity.org or 212-687-0328.