The Louvre Museum in Paris, the most visited museum in the world, was forced to shut its doors on Sunday after a brazen, daylight robbery targeted the priceless French Crown Jewels. A gang of thieves, exploiting construction at the historic palace, made off with nine pieces of jewelry from the collection of Napoleon and Empress Josephine, prompting a full lockdown and a massive police manhunt.
The heist occurred just as the museum was opening its doors on Sunday morning. According to preliminary reports and police sources, at least three masked individuals breached the museum’s security by entering through a construction zone on the Seine River side of the building. The thieves reportedly used a freight elevator to gain direct and rapid access to their target: the prestigious Galerie d’Apollon, the opulent hall that displays the surviving French Crown Jewels.
Once inside, two of the robbers smashed the reinforced display cases while a third stood guard. They grabbed nine specific items from the collection belonging to Napoleon Bonaparte and his wife, Empress Josephine, including valuable necklaces, brooches, and at least one tiara. The thieves then fled the scene, reportedly escaping on a motorcycle.
Crucially, museum sources confirmed that the collection’s centerpiece, the legendary 140-carat Regent Diamond, was untouched and remains secure.
France’s Culture Minister, Rachida Dati, arrived on-site and confirmed the robbery in a public statement. “A robbery took place this morning at the opening of the Louvre Museum,” she wrote on social media. “No injuries to report. I am on site alongside the museum teams and the police. Investigations are underway.”
The museum immediately evacuated visitors and announced on its official channels that it would “remain closed today for exceptional reasons.”
The theft is a stunning and embarrassing security breach for one of the world’s most guarded cultural institutions. The method of entry—using a construction entrance and a service elevator—points to a well-planned operation that exploited a known vulnerability. The targeted nature of the theft, focusing only on specific, portable items from the Napoleonic era, also suggests a high degree of planning, possibly a theft-to-order.
The incident is the most significant theft at the museum in decades, evoking memories of the audacious 1911 theft of the Mona Lisa. As Paris police and art theft specialists begin their investigation, the world’s most famous museum remains closed, its halls empty as authorities hunt for the perpetrators and the priceless pieces of French history they stole.
Footage Charlie Kirk has been shot
Charlie Kirk has been shot









