Thieves executed a swift raid on a French museum showcasing works by luxury glassmaker René Lalique and his family, staff reported, less than a year after a shocking Louvre heist in Paris.
The thieves, wearing masks, broke into the Musée Lalique in the eastern Alsace region and removed approximately 20 items, collectively valued at several million euros, on Sunday morning, according to France Info and other outlets.
The museum’s Instagram post noted that the jewelry was taken “in a very short span of time.” The perpetrators triggered the security alarms, staff had already identified the missing pieces, and police were examining CCTV footage as they opened an investigation.
The statement did not provide further details about the specific items taken.
Located in Wingen‑sur‑Moder, about 60 km (40 mi) northwest of Strasbourg, the museum’s collection exceeds 650 pieces, featuring Art Nouveau jewelry, Art Deco glass, and crystal, as shown on its website.
René Lalique, who passed away at 85 in 1945, started his career as a jeweler and was renowned for incorporating “glass, enamel, horn, ivory, and semi‑precious stones” into his designs, the museum’s website added.
The museum announced it will remain closed for the coming days to ensure it can reopen with enhanced security, the institution added.
Thieves infiltrated Paris’s world‑famous Louvre Museum in October of the previous year. Multiple suspects have been detained, yet the priceless artifacts remain unrecovered.
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