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Following the current break-in at the Louvre in Paris, the world’s most checked out museum, security procedures at museums have actually come under analysis, obviously for great factor.
A dripped report by France’s supreme audit body Cours de Compte showed major issues about security systems at the cherished museum.
The report declared the center had a “persistent under-investment in details systems,” Reuters kept in mind.
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It was likewise exposed today that the security system password was obviously simply “LOUVRE,” making it simple for burglars to hack into the system, other outlets reported.
On Oct. 19, a four-person group burglarized the Apollo Gallery in broad daytime and took 8 gems valued jointly at 88 million euros ($ 102 million). 7 individuals have actually been detained for supposed functions in the criminal activity, and 4 suspects have actually been officially charged.
This diamond and sapphire tiara coming from Queen Marie-Amélie, the last queen of France, and used too by Queen Hortense and Isabelle of Orleans, was taken in a brazen break-in on Oct. 19. The tiara consists of over 1,000 diamonds, according to the Louvre. ( Stéphane Maréchalle/ RMN-Grand Palais)
Fox News Digital called the Louvre to ask whether the break-in is impacting its security procedures, however the museum stated it does not “talk about security matters.”
Fox News Digital likewise connected to a number of significant museums in the U.S. looking for remark about possible upgrades to their security systems however did not instantly hear back.
BRAND-NEW VIDEO PURPORTEDLY REVEALS LOUVRE BURGLARS IN ACTION DURING BRAZEN DAYTIME BREAK-IN
The Louvre has actually dealt with theft previously, signing up with a long history of prominent art break-ins.
Continue reading for simply a couple of.
Swiped from its frame
In August 1911, panic broke out at the Louvre when Leonardo da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa” vanished.
A burglar had actually swiped the painting from its frame and left with it by concealing the artwork under his coat.

The renowned Louvre in Paris was closed Oct. 19 after a number of pieces of indispensable fashion jewelry were taken in a brazen break-in. ( Zhang Weiguo/VCG through AP)
” The news [of the theft] spread like wildfire and generous benefits were assured for her return,” the Louvre states by itself site.
LOUVRE MUSEUM CLOSED AFTER BREAK-IN, FRENCH AUTHORITIES SAYS
2 years later on, Vincenzo Peruggia, a glazier who had actually operated at the Louvre, attempted to offer the da Vinci work of art that he ‘d taken to an Italian art dealership.
After the dealership signaled authorities, the world’s most well-known painting was gone back to the Louvre.

The theft on Oct. 19 happened in broad daytime. The gems taken that day are valued at $102 million. ( Thibault Camus: AP)
Peruggia was detained and served just a brief jail term for the theft, according to History.com and other sources.
Stays unsolved
Another break-in, even more current, occurred at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston.
It stays unsolved to this day.

A report declared the museum “stopped working to capture up in the release of devices planned to make sure the defense of works,” Agence France-Presse reported. ( Antoine Gyori-Corbis/Corbis through Getty Images)
2 guys camouflaged as regional policeman got in the museum in the early hours of March 18, 1990, stating they were reacting to a call of a disruption, according to The Associated Press.
BRAZEN LOUVRE BREAK-IN TEAM MIGHT HAVE BEEN WORKED WITH BY COLLECTOR, DISTRICT ATTORNEY SAYS
The guys surpassed 2 guard and connected them up with duct tape.
The burglars had the ability to take 13 art pieces, consisting of works by Rembrandt, Vermeer, Degas and Manet, in the roughly 81 minutes they invested there.

2 guys camouflaged as regional policeman got in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and took 13 art pieces in 1990. Today, the empty frames left by the burglars await remembrance of the lost works. ( John Tlumacki/The Boston World through Getty Images)
The work of arts, consisting of Rembrandt’s “Storm on the Sea of Galilee,” were approximated to be worth as much as half a billion dollars at the time of the break-in.
LOUVRE DIRECTOR BARBECUED ON SPECTACULAR SECURITY FAILURES, INCLUDING CAM POINTING FAR FROM SECRET VERANDA
The empty frames left by the burglars still await the museum to this day.
” It’s a deliberate option created to send out a message to the general public– a pointer of what was lost and hope that what was when there will sooner or later return,” according to the FBI’s site.

From the well-known “Mona Lisa” theft in 1911 to contemporary museum break-ins, art criminal activity continues to challenge security systems worldwide. ( Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters)
‘ Crucial time’
In September 2025, simply a month before the most current Louvre break-in, burglars burglarized Paris’ Nature Museum.
They took gold samples worth about $700,000, according to Agence France-Presse and the museum.
The trespassers were stated to have actually utilized an angle mill and a blowtorch to require their method into the complex, Artnet.com and others reported.
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It triggered a museum representative to state that this is a “important time for cultural organizations” in France.

At Blenheim Palace, where Winston Churchill was born, a burglar took a golden toilet in 2018. ( Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
And at the nation estate of Blenheim Palace, where Winston Churchill was born, a burglar took a golden toilet in 2018.
The toilet was an art setup entitled “America” by Maurizio Cattelan. It was made from 18-carat gold and guaranteed for around $6 million, according to AP.
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Equipped with sledgehammers and crowbars, the burglar smashed a window to get in the home while spying the toilet from its pipes within 5 minutes, later on getting away in a taken vehicle.
Sign of ‘renaissance’
On Friday, the Louvre’s director, Laurence des Cars, stated the diamond and emerald-studded crown of Empress Eugénie, which was discovered harmed outside the museum after obviously being dropped throughout the Oct. 19 break-in, will be brought back as a sign of “renaissance,” AP reported.
Just Empress Eugénie’s royal crown, with more than 1,300 diamonds, was recuperated on the day of the break-in outside the museum.
Des Cars stated the crown was most likely harmed when it was eliminated from its screen case through a “little cut” made by a disc cutter utilized by the burglars, instead of when it was up to the ground.
Fox News Digital’s Alexandra Koch, plus The Associated Press and Reuters, contributed reporting.
Source: Fox News.
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