Louvre robbery: Belgian lead revives investigation

Published on 02/06/2026 - 11:56 GMT+2•Updated 12:03 The investigation into the Louvre Museum burglary...
Published on 02/06/2026 - 11:56 GMT+2•Updated 12:03
The investigation into the Louvre Museum burglary has taken a new turn. Several weeks after the spectacular theft of 19 October 2025, which left its mark on the famous Paris museum and on the French state as a whole, the investigation has taken on an international dimension with the emergence of a Belgian lead considered serious by investigators.
According to the newspaper Le Parisien, analysis of the phones of several suspects from Eastern Europe, known for stealing goods, has revealed exchanges and connections suggesting direct links with Belgium.
Calls, photos stored on the phones – in particular of the Galerie d’Apollon, where the Crown Jewels were stolen – as well as movements and certain identified contacts, are now steering detectives towards this new geographical area, seen as a possible base of operations for the network involved.
In light of these findings, French investigators have travelled to Belgium to pursue their inquiries on the ground. Checks are under way, focusing not only on the entourage of suspects already identified in France, but also on potential accomplices or fences who may have helped organise the heist.
This development reinforces the theory of a commando unit acting on behalf of very wealthy international backers or highly specialised criminal networks.
At the same time, the French authorities are continuing their investigations on national territory, in particular to identify all members of the network and to understand how the operation as a whole was organised. The goal remains unchanged: to recover the stolen works and valuables and to dismantle the entire operation.
Stolen haul still missing
The thieves entered the Galerie d’Apollon on Sunday 19 October at 9 a.m. and in a matter of minutes made off with a haul worth 88 million euros.
They notably took a diamond and emerald necklace given by Napoleon to Empress Marie-Louise, jewellery linked to 19th-century queens Marie-Amélie and Hortense, as well as the pearl and diamond tiara of Empress Eugénie, wife of Napoleon III.
None of the items has so far been recovered, but according to a journalist from Le Parisien and another from the Belgian newspaper L’Avenir (source in French), a hearing could be held this week with French suspects, some of whom are said to be “ready to reveal where the stolen jewels are hidden” in order to reduce their sentences.



