Overview
The Louvre Jewel Heist refers to a theft that took place in Paris's Louvre Museum on the morning of 19th October, 2025. our hooded thieves posing as construction workers used a truck-mounted mechanical lift to scale the Seine‑facing façade, cut into a window in the Galerie d'Apollon, smashed display cases, and stole eight items from the French Crown Jewels collection in a heist that lasted under eight minutes. One of the stolen items, Empress Eugénie's crown, was dropped near the museum during the escape and recovered in damaged condition. By late October, seven suspects were detained, and four were formally charged, however, the stolen jewels remain mostly unrecovered.
Online, memes about the stolen jewels began making the rounds soon after news of the theft broke. A photo of a dapper-looking man went viral after an X user incorrectly identified him as a detective on the case, with memes referring to him as Inspector Clouseau.
Background
On October 19, 2025, at around 9:30 a.m. local time, a group of thieves used a mechanical lift against the Seine‑facing façade to reach a window above Galerie d’Apollon in the Louvre. According to Reuters, the thieves cut through glass display cases and escaped via motorbikes after taking eight historic pieces from the French Crown Jewels collection, but dropping Empress Eugénie's crown, which was later recovered in damaged condition.
According to Time magazine, President Emmanuel Macron immediately condemned the theft as "an attack on a heritage that we cherish" and pledged that those responsible would be caught. Meanwhile, Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez called it a "major robbery" involving jewels of "incommensurable heritage value."
An NBC YouTube video covering the event on October 19th, 2025, gathered over 115,000 views in two weeks.
Also on October 19th, Redditor /u/UrADumbdumbi posted an image listing the jewels stolen from the Louvre to the subreddit /r/ArtHistory and gathered over 13,000 upvotes in two weeks.
Developments
On October 20th, 2025, German lift maker "Böcker" made a post on their Facebook and Instagram page @boeckermaschinenwerke, promoting their mechanical lift after they realised that one of their products had been used in the heist.
The post touts the ability of the "Böcker Agilo" to transport up to 400 kilograms (880 pounds) of "your treasures" at a speed of 42 meters (46 yards) per minute. The post also notes that it moves "whisper quiet" thanks to its 230 Volt E-Motor. The post gathered over 80,000 likes in two weeks, and was reposted to the subreddit /r/interestingasfuck on October 24th, where it gathered over 13,000 likes in a week.
On October 23rd, new footage emerged showing the thieves in action, escaping with the jewels via the mechanical lift. The video appeared to have originally been posted by X user @PasLeTemps75_, with sources like Art News confirming the validity of the footage on October 24.
The footage was also reposted to the subreddit /r/Damnthatsinteresting, where it gathered over 62,000 upvotes in a week.
byu/HeToTopT inDamnthatsinteresting
Dapper 'French Detective' AP Photograph
On October 19th, 2025, photographer Thibault Camus captured an image showing police blocking the entrance to the Louvre soon after the heist, showing Paris police standing next to an unusually well-dressed man dressed in a fedora and a three-piece suit. The image was submitted to Associated Press with the title, "Police officers block an access to the Louvre museum after a robbery Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025, in Paris."
The image was posted to the subreddit /r/AccidentalRenaissance on October 19th, gathering over 20,000 upvotes in two weeks. On October 22nd, the image was reposted to the subreddit /r/SipsTea and on October 14th, to the subreddit /r/memes, where it gathered over 20,000 and 12,000 upvotes, respectively.
According to a New York Times interview with the photographer, the man was simply a random passerby he had decided to capture because of his distinct look. However, the image came to be reposted online alongside captions wrongly claiming that the man is actually a detective working on the Louvre Heist, and comparing him to Inspector Clouseau, Poirot, or the kind of private eye in a 1940s noir.
On October 22nd, 2025, X user @MsMelChen tweeted, "Actual shot (not AI!) of a French detective working the case of the French Crown Jewels that were stolen from the Louvre in a brazen daylight robbery." The post incorrectly asserted that the man was law enforcement assigned to the Louvre Jewel Heist, and gathered over 5 million views and 49,000 likes in a week.
Louvre Heist Suspects Arrested
On 25th October, 2025, two men in their 30s from Seine-Saint-Denis were arrested. One was caught at Charles de Gaulle Airport as he was attempting to fly out. On 29 October 2025, five additional suspects were arrested in coordinated raids across Paris and Seine-Saint-Denis. And, according to Reuters, on 1 November 2025, a 38-year-old woman and a 37-year-old man were formally charged (placed under investigation) in connection with the heist, bringing the total number charged to four.
Online Reactions
On October 19th, 2025, Threads user @thelesliegaar wrote, "The fact that the Louvre heist didn’t take place at dawn, but at the very reasonable hour of 9:30 a.m. shows that even French jewel thieves have a better work-life balance than us." The post gathered over 60,000 likes in two weeks.
On October 19th, X user @MemphisMessick tweeted an image of a cheeto being used as a doorlatch, writing, "Le Louvre," and gathering over 59,000 likes in two weeks.
On October 23rd, TikToker @gabhope_08 posted a video dressed in hi-vis vests and tiaras, acting like the robbers who stole from the Louvre and gathering over 5.6 million plays and 950,000 likes in a week.
@gabhope_08 Just got back, keep it on the louvre #heist #lourve #diamonds #halloweencostume #funny ♬ Pink Panther Intro – Henry Mancini.png)
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