
Visitors queue to enter the Louvre museum in Paris, 3 days after the historic daylight jewel theft, Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025. AP Photo
The director of the Louvre Museum has admitted to a “terrible failure” following a daring daylight jewel heist that stunned the world. Laurence des Cars told French senators on Wednesday that she had offered to resign after the theft but was asked to stay.
The Louvre, the world’s most visited museum, reopened to long queues under its famous glass pyramid, just days after eight royal treasures vanished in one of the most audacious museum thefts in decades.
Security Gaps Exposed
In her testimony, des Cars acknowledged weaknesses in the museum’s security system. She revealed that the Louvre lacked sufficient exterior cameras and that gaps in surveillance contributed to the heist.
“We did not detect the thieves’ arrival soon enough,” she admitted. “The alarms worked, but the perimeter isn’t fully covered by video surveillance.”
She announced plans to install more cameras, set up barriers to prevent vehicles from parking near the building, and push for a police station inside the museum. The Louvre welcomes about 30,000 visitors daily and employs more than 2,000 staff.
A Four-Minute Operation
Investigators say the thieves struck swiftly on Sunday morning. Using a freight lift, they accessed the Seine-facing façade, forced open a window, smashed two glass cases, and escaped on motorbikes through central Paris — all in under four minutes.
The stolen items, worth around €88 million ($102 million), included a sapphire diadem, emerald necklaces, diamond-studded brooches, and priceless jewels once worn by French royalty. One damaged crown, set with emeralds and over 1,300 diamonds, was later recovered near the museum.
A Blow to France’s Cultural Image
The theft, which took place just steps away from the “Mona Lisa,” has drawn comparisons to the 2019 Notre Dame Cathedral fire — another moment that wounded France’s cultural pride.
The scandal has also intensified pressure on President Emmanuel Macron and Culture Minister Rachida Dati, who now face questions over museum security and staffing.
Earlier this year, Louvre employees went on strike, citing chronic understaffing and limited resources. “Too few eyes on too many rooms,” one union representative had warned.
Visitors React with Shock and Calm
As the museum reopened, reactions among tourists ranged from disbelief to composure.
“For a place like the Louvre, it’s unfathomable,” said Amanda Lee, a teacher from Chicago. “How could this happen here, in broad daylight?”
But others took a calmer view. “We came for the art,” said Claire Martin, a lawyer from Versailles. “Let the police find the thieves.”
Fear for Irreplaceable History
Prosecutor Laure Beccuau said the stolen treasures hold far greater historical than monetary value. Experts fear that if the thieves dismantle or melt the pieces, centuries of French history could be lost forever.
Around 100 investigators are now working to trace the suspects. Four people have been identified near the scene, and forensic analysis is underway.
Meanwhile, President Macron’s planned security overhaul for the Louvre — including an expanded camera grid and new command post — is now under renewed scrutiny.
Inside the reopened museum, masterpieces like the Venus de Milo and Winged Victory shine as before. But in the sealed Apollo Gallery, the empty cases tell a quieter story — one of loss, vulnerability, and a nation forced to confront the cracks in its cultural armor.

