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Fifty-seven museum directors from the world’s most prestigious cultural institutions have united in an unprecedented show of solidarity for Louvre director Laurence des Cars, following last week’s audacious theft of eight priceless Napoleonic jewels worth €88 million. The open letter, published today in Le Monde, represents a coordinated defense of both des Cars’ leadership and the fundamental mission of museums worldwide.artnews
The letter, signed by leaders from institutions including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the British Museum, Tate, and the Victoria & Albert Museum, declares that “museums are not strongholds nor secret vaults” but must remain “open and accessible” despite increasing security threats. The signatories describe the October 19 heist as “what all museum professionals dread” and emphasize that such risks “weigh upon every artwork from the moment it is publicly displayed”.museumsassociation
“This theft is not only an attack on the Louvre but on museums themselves in their most fundamental mission: to share humanity’s common heritage with the greatest number of people,” the letter states. The international coalition includes directors from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, National Gallery London, Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, and institutions spanning from São Paulo to Tokyo.protothema
The show of support comes as French police made significant progress in their investigation, arresting two suspects on Saturday evening. One man was apprehended at Charles de Gaulle Airport just 40 minutes before his scheduled flight to Algeria, while the second was caught preparing to travel to Mali. Both suspects, French nationals in their thirties from the Paris suburb of Aubervilliers, were already known to police for previous jewelry thefts.abcnews
DNA evidence recovered from a helmet left at the crime scene proved crucial in identifying the suspects, who investigators believe played active roles in the brazen daylight robbery. The theft, which lasted just seven minutes, saw thieves use a truck-mounted ladder to access the Apollo Gallery through a window, making off with jewels including Empress Eugénie’s tiara and Napoleon’s gifts to his second wife.pbs
More than 100 investigators continue searching for two additional suspects and the stolen artifacts, which remain missing. The Louvre has since transferred its most precious remaining jewels to the Bank of France’s maximum-security vault, 26 meters underground.museumsassociation