A person arrested by French police earlier this week is considered the fourth member of the staff that stole France’s crown jewels in a brazen heist from the Louvre Museum, the Paris prosecutor stated Friday.
Prosecutor Laure Beccuau, whose workplace is heading the investigation, stated the 39-year-old man has a prison report, with six earlier convictions.
He has now been handed preliminary costs of theft by an organized gang, punishable by 15 years imprisonment, and prison conspiracy, which may carry a 10-year sentence if he’s convicted for his suspected function within the gorgeous Oct. 19 theft on the world’s most-visited museum. The theft gang’s haul of loot was value an estimated $102 million — a financial worth that did not embrace their enormous historic worth to France.
Remon Haazen / Getty Photographs
The prosecutor’s assertion did not say what function, precisely, the person is assumed to have performed within the daylight heist, carried out with angle grinders, a freight carry and subterfuge, with robbers dressed as staff in shiny vests.
The theft is believed to have been the work of a four-person staff — with two individuals breaking into the museum’s Apollo Gallery the place the jewels had been displayed after which being whisked away on motorbikes by two associates who waited outdoors.
The jewels have not been recovered. The thieves made off with a haul together with a diamond-and-emerald necklace Napoleon gave to Empress Marie-Louise, jewels tied to Nineteenth-century Queens Marie-Amélie and Hortense, and Empress Eugénie’s pearl-and-diamond tiara.
The thieves took lower than eight minutes to power their manner into the museum and depart, utilizing a freight carry to succeed in the constructing’s window. Footage from museum cameras confirmed that the 2 who broke into the ornate Apollo Gallery used grinders to chop into jewellery show instances.
The emerald-set imperial crown of Napoleon III’s spouse, Empress Eugénie, containing greater than 1,300 diamonds, was later discovered outdoors the museum.