0 like 1 dislike
ago in General Factchecking by (150 points)
On Sunday, October 19, four thieves broke into the Louvre in broad daylight and stole $102 million worth in jewels. Here's the kicker, it took only seven minutes to complete. Researchers are trying to figure out how such a guarded and secure museum was broken into in such a small span of time in the middle of the day. https://abcnews.go.com/International/thieves-robbed-louvre-minutes-minute-minute-breakdown-daring/story?id=126719610

3 Answers

1 like 0 dislike
ago by Newbie (250 points)

According to the Time article by Rebecca Schneid and Solcyré Burga, investigators say the thieves entered and exited the museum in under four minutes on Sunday morning. Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez said the robbery was "a major, highly organized operation carried out by a team that had done scouting".  In the museum, the thieves smashed glass cases and stole eight pieces of historic royal jewelry valued at around $100 million. Robbers escaped on scooters and were gone in less than four minutes, so no, the robbery didn't take seven minutes; the heist lasted just under four minutes from start to finish. 

https://time.com/7326868/louvre-robbery-museum-crown-jewels/

False
ago by Novice (670 points)
0 0
I really like how you provided clarification on how the thieves broke in, it really shows the depths you went to answer this question. I also really like how you included a link to where all this information is provided. Nice job.
0 like 0 dislike
ago by (160 points)
The claim is largely true, based on current information. ABC, CNN, and BBC report that according to police, the vehicle with the ladder that the thieves used arrived to the Louvre at 9:30 am, and by 9:37 to 9:38, they had left. So depending on the source, the thieves were on site for 7 to 8 minutes. According to CNN and BBC, French police believe the thieves were only inside for 4 minutes, and so one could argue the heist took only 4 minutes, but this boils down to differing definitions. However, as the robbery happened recently and the investigation is still on-going, more information may come up to confirm or disprove this claim.

https://abcnews.go.com/International/louvre-museum-closes-after-robbery-french-minister/story?id=126657104

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cg7nrlkg0zxo

https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/23/europe/france-louvre-director-heist-intl-hnk
True
0 like 0 dislike
ago by Newbie (300 points)

Based on current information, this claim is untrue. According to a TIME article, investigators suspect that it took less than four minutes for the thieves to enter the museum, steal the jewels, and exit the museum to escape. Employees at the museum have been reporting understaffing since earlier this year. They have claimed that there were "too few eyes on too many rooms" (TIME). This is still a developing case, and there are a lot of unanswered questions, but we can establish that it took less than four minutes for the thieves to enter and exit the museum. ABC News published an article with an estimated timeline of seven minutes for the entire robbery, which included the time it took for the thieves to park their truck and then drive away. However, they also concluded that the thieves would have only spent four minutes in the museum. So overall, this claim is untrue. 

Exaggerated/ Misleading

Community Rules


• Be respectful
• Always list your sources and include links so readers can check them for themselves.
• Use primary sources when you can, and only go to credible secondary sources if necessary.
• Try to rely on more than one source, especially for big claims.
• Point out if sources you quote have interests that could affect how accurate their evidence is.
• Watch for bias in sources and let readers know if you find anything that might influence their perspective.
• Show all the important evidence, whether it supports or goes against the claim.
...