France arrests two men, two women over Louvre heist: Prosecutor
French police officers stand next to a furniture elevator used by robbers to enter the Louvre Museum, on Quai Francois-Mitterrand in Paris on Oct 19, 2025. (File photo: AFP/Dimitar Dilkoff)
PARIS: French authorities on Tuesday (Nov 25) arrested four more people in the probe into last month's spectacular daylight theft of imperial jewels from the Louvre museum, the top Paris prosecutor said.
"They are two men aged 38 and 39, and two women aged 31 and 40, all from the Paris region," Laure Beccuau said, following earlier charges against four others over the Oct 19 heist.
Last month, a four-strong gang raided the Louvre, the world's most-visited art museum, in broad daylight, taking just seven minutes to steal jewellery worth an estimated US$102 million before fleeing on scooters.
The thieves parked a moving truck with a ladder below the museum's Apollo Gallery housing the French crown jewels, ascended in a bucket, broke a window and used angle grinders to cut into glass display booths containing the treasures.
The four already charged over the theft include three men and a woman.
One of those men, a 37-year-old, was in a relationship with the woman and they have children, Beccuau said earlier this month.
The thieves dropped a diamond- and emerald-studded crown that once belonged to Empress Eugenie, the wife of Napoleon III, as they escaped.
But they made off with eight other items of jewellery, including an emerald-and-diamond necklace that Napoleon I gave his second wife, Empress Marie-Louise.
The loot has still not been found.