Two suspects in Louvre heist partially admit involvement: Paris prosecutor

Two suspects in Louvre heist partially admit involvement: Paris prosecutor

After “partially admitting to the charges,” Paris Public Prosecutor Laure Beccuau has reported that the two men who were detained for a jewel heist at France’s Louvre Museum are now facing charges of theft and criminal conspiracy.

According to Beccuau, the suspects were to be detained by magistrates on Wednesday in order to “charge them with organized theft, which carries a 15-year prison sentence” and criminal conspiracy, which could lead to ten years in prison. Beccuau stated that the jewelry that was taken on October 19 has not yet been recovered.

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According to a Paris prosecutor, two suspects in the Louvre jewel heist have “partially” admitted their involvement and are thought to be the men who allegedly forced their way into the world’s most popular museum.

According to Beccuau, the two suspects are expected to be in temporary detention and face preliminary charges of theft committed by an organized gang and criminal conspiracy. She declined to provide specifics about their remarks.

The world was shocked when thieves stole the jewels worth 88 million euros ($102m) in less than eight minutes. Eight pieces of the French crown jewels were taken with them after they forced open a window, cut into cases with power tools, and fled.

A 34-year-old Algerian national who has resided in France since 2010, according to Beccuau, is the suspect. He had no return ticket and was being detained on Saturday night at Charles de Gaulle Airport. According to Beccuau, he was a resident of Paris’ northern suburb of Aubervilliers and was primarily known to the police for traffic offenses.

The 39-year-old suspect was detained at his home in Aubervilliers on Saturday night.

No evidence to suggest that he was about to leave the country, Beccuau said. The man’s DNA was discovered on one of the glass cases where the jewels were displayed and on items the thieves left behind, according to the woman. He was known to the police for several thefts.

The suspects’ attorneys had a late-Monday deadline to file charges against them, release them, or request an extension from the judge.

Jewels have not yet been recovered.

According to Beccuau, the jewels have not been recovered.

She warned that anyone who purchases these jewels would be guilty of concealing stolen goods because they are now, of course, unsellable. There is still time to return them.

French police made clear that the Louvre’s defenses had significant gaps, turning the brilliant-night theft into a national debate over how France protects its treasures earlier on Wednesday.

Patrice Faure, the police chief in Paris, claimed that the museum’s weak seams were caused by slow-moving fixes and ageing systems.

He claimed that there hasn’t been a technological advancement, noting that some of the video network’s analog components still produce lower-quality images that take longer to share in real time.

He claimed that a long-promised revamp won’t be finished until 2029-2030.

Faure also made it clear that some people believe that the Louvre’s document lapse, which they saw as a sign of greater negligence, was the quietly expired authorization to use its security cameras from July.

Officers “arrived extremely quickly” following the theft, according to the police chief, but the lag in the response process spanned earlier stages of the chain, from initial detection to museum security to the emergency line to police command.

According to Faure and his team, a cyclist outside who dialed the emergency line after seeing helmeted men using a basket lift was the first to call the police and not the Louvre’s alarms.

A museum in eastern France discovered a damaged display case within 24 hours of the Louvre heist, reporting the theft of gold and silver coins.

Source: Aljazeera

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