Ex-thief says he warned Louvre of security weaknesses around crown jewels

Ex-thief says he warned Louvre of security weaknesses around crown jewels
French police vans are parked near the glass Pyramid of the Louvre Museum in Paris on October 27, 2025, after police arrested suspects in the Louvre heist case. (Reuters)
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Updated 30 October 2025
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Ex-thief says he warned Louvre of security weaknesses around crown jewels

Ex-thief says he warned Louvre of security weaknesses around crown jewels
  • David Desclos says he flagged the gallery’s windows in 2020 when the Louvre invited him for its in-house podcast about a historic 1792 theft
  • “Through the windows — even from the roofs — there are plenty of ways in,” the former bank robber recounted telling a senior official involved in the production

PARIS: Days after thieves took just minutes to steal eight pieces of the French crown jewels from the Louvre, a former bank robber says he warned a museum official of glaring weaknesses — including jewel cases by streetside windows that were “a piece of cake” to attack.
David Desclos talks like what he was: a pro who knew how to make alarms go quiet. In an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday just outside I.M. Pei’s glass pyramid, the reformed burglar said he flagged the gallery’s windows and nearby display cases years ago, after the Louvre invited him to the Apollo Gallery to weigh in for its 2020 in-house podcast about a historic 1792 theft.
“Have you seen those windows? They’re a piece of cake. You can imagine anything — people in disguise, slipping in through the windows,” he said, recounting that he told a senior official involved in the Louvre’s podcast production — not the museum director — about the risk. “Through the windows — even from the roofs — there are plenty of ways in.”
Then came Sunday’s heist. Authorities say two thieves in high-visibility jackets smashed through a window of the Apollo Gallery and used power tools to cut open cases. Eight crown-jewel items — valued in some reports at more than $100 million — disappeared in minutes. A ninth piece, Empress

 

Eugénie’s diamond-studded crown, was found on the ground outside the museum, damaged but salvageable. Two suspects have been arrested; others remain at large.
“Exactly what I had predicted,” Desclos said. “They came by the windows … they came, they took, and they left.”
Timing, he argues, was part of the trick. “Do it in broad daylight, at opening time — that disables the first alarm layer… You know you’ve got five to seven minutes before police arrive.”
A smash-and-grab is choreography, he says: rehearsal, a stopwatch, muscle memory.
Were display cases a weak spot?
High on his list of weak points is a 2019 overhaul of the Apollo Gallery display cases. Desclos — who has slicked back hair and a larger-than-life personality — says older display cases were designed so that, in an attack, treasures could drop to safety; newer ones without that feature left the artifacts vulnerable.
As he put it: “It’s incomprehensible they changed the cases to leave jewels within arm’s reach. You’re making it easier for burglars.”
The Louvre has pushed back on such criticism, saying the newer vitrines are more secure and meet modern standards.
And then there was one glaring soft spot. “When I saw that specific window, I thought: they’re crazy.”
Desclos says he raised those concerns with the Louvre official after the podcast recording and avoided spelling out vulnerabilities on air.
“I couldn’t say on the podcast, ‘Go burglarize.’ That would have given the idea to many others,” he told AP.
The Louvre did not immediately respond to AP’s request for comment. AP has listened to the podcast and verified Desclos’ presence on it but cannot immediately verify his account of warning a museum official.
An ex-con with a colorful story
If the messenger sounds improbable, so does his résumé. He grew up in Caen, Normandy, started stealing food as a child, moved on to department stores and banks, and specialized in neutralizing alarm systems. In the late 1990s, he says he and accomplices spent months tunneling through city sewers to reach a Société Générale bank vault at Christmas.
Incredibly, Desclos has reinvented himself as a stand-up comedian, performing a show titled ‘Hold-Up’ drawn from his past.
Desclos stresses that despite his notorious former career, he has no leads on the famous museum breach.
Security reckoning in Paris museums
Scrutiny of the heist is widening. Paris Police Chief Patrice Faure is scheduled to speak at the French Senate on Wednesday in a session on museum security and the broader threats highlighted by the theft.
The Louvre’s strains have been visible for months. In June, a spontaneous staff strike — including security personnel — forced the museum to close as workers protested unmanageable crowds, chronic understaffing and what one union representative called “untenable” conditions, leaving thousands of ticketed visitors under Pei’s pyramid.
As for the loot’s afterlife, Desclos drains the glamor fast. “There is 90— 95 percent chance the jewels will be dismantled and stone by stone put in block,” he said.
His prescription is blunt: vault the originals; show replicas. “The real ones should be at the Banque de France,” he said. French media report that after the heist, remaining crown-jewel pieces were moved to the central bank’s deep vaults, sitting near secure national gold reserves and Leonardo da Vinci’s notebooks.
“They should have listened,” Desclos said.


World leaders to rally climate fight ahead of Amazon summit

World leaders to rally climate fight ahead of Amazon summit
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World leaders to rally climate fight ahead of Amazon summit

World leaders to rally climate fight ahead of Amazon summit
  • About 50 heads of state are expected in the rainforest city of Belem for a summit ahead of next week's COP30 climate negotiations
  • Almost every nation is participating, but the US is sending nobody, with President Donald Trump having branded climate science a “con job”

BELÉM, Brazil: World leaders meet Thursday in the Brazilian Amazon in an effort to show that climate change remains a top global priority despite broken promises and the United States shunning the gathering.
About 50 heads of state and government are expected in the rainforest city of Belem for a summit on Thursday and Friday ahead of the annual UN Conference of Parties (COP) climate negotiations that open next week.
Almost every nation is participating, but Washington is sending nobody, with President Donald Trump having branded climate science a “con job.”
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron are expected in Belem but other major economies, including China and India, are sending deputies or climate ministers.
The choice of Belem, a city of 1.4 million people, half of whom live in working-class neighborhoods known as favelas, has been controversial due to its limited infrastructure, with sky-high hotel fees complicating the participation of small delegations and NGOs.
Authorities have invested in new buildings and renovations, but with fewer than 24 hours to go to the leaders’ summit opening, media teams and delegation scouts arrived at the COP venue Wednesday to find building works still very much underway.
Nonetheless, Karol Farias, 34, a makeup artist who came to shop at the newly spruced up Ver-o-Peso market told AFP: “The COP is bringing Belem the recognition it deserves.”

Uphill battle 

Brazil is not seeking to land a big deal at COP30, but rather to send a clear signal in an uncertain time that nations still back the climate fight.
The US absence will linger awkwardly during the summit, as will Brazil’s recent approval of oil drilling near the mouth of the Amazon River.
So, too, will the unanswered call for a wave of ambitious new climate pledges ahead of COP30, and the stark acknowledgement from UN chief Antonio Guterres that the target of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius from pre-Industrial levels will be missed.
Host Brazil is also still scrambling to find affordable rooms in Belem for cash-strapped countries.

Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva gestures next to James Marape, prime minister of Papua New Guinea, ahead of the COP 30, in Belem, Brazil, on November 5, 2025. (REUTERS)

The COP30 presidency on Tuesday said it had secured outside funding to provide three free cabins aboard cruise ships for delegations from low-income countries.
Brazil has acknowledged the uphill battle it faces rallying climate action at a time of wars and tariff disputes, tight budgets, and a populist backlash against green policies.
In a sobering reminder of the task at hand, a closely watched vote last month to reduce pollution from global shipping was rejected under intense pressure from the United States.
Leaders gathered in Belem “need to deliver a clear mandate to the COP to be ambitious and to close the gap and to address the issues that are burning,” Greenpeace Brazil executive director Carolina Pasquali told AFP from aboard the organization’s Rainbow Warrior flagship, docked at the city’s port.

 ‘Enough talk’ 

Rather than producing a slew of new commitments, Brazil has cast the summit as an opportunity for accountability.
“Enough talking, now we have to implement what we’ve already discussed,” Brazil’s President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said this week.
Brazil is putting diplomatic muscle into pitching a global fund that would reward tropical countries for protecting rainforests.
It has also put a particular emphasis on adaptation, a key demand of countries pushing for more help to build defenses against rising seas and climate disasters.
“This is not a charity, but a necessity,” Evans Njewa, a Malawian diplomat and chair of the Least Developed Countries bloc, told AFP.
These countries want concrete detail on how climate finance can be substantially boosted to $1.3 trillion a year by 2035 — the estimated need in the developing world.
The hosts are also under pressure to marshal a response to the collective failure to limit warming to 1.5C as agreed in the landmark Paris accord a decade ago.
Even if all commitments are enacted in full, global warming is still set to reach 2.5C by century’s end.
“For many of our countries, we won’t be able to adapt our way out of something that overshoots over two degrees,” Ilana Seid, a diplomat from Palau and chair of the Alliance of Small Island States, told AFP in October.
They, among others, want to tackle fossil fuels and push for deeper cuts to greenhouse gas emissions.
Lula said Brazil wants to “propose a roadmap for reducing fossil fuels” but conceded it was a difficult conversation.