Wednesday, October 22, 2025 - A Chinese woman has been indicted by a judge in Paris for allegedly stealing nearly $2 million worth of gold nuggets from the city’s National Museum of Natural History, including items dating back to the California gold rush.
The Paris Public Prosecutor’s Office announced Tuesday that
the 24-year-old suspect was charged with classified theft and criminal
conspiracy following the Sept. 16 heist. She was arrested two weeks later in
Barcelona, Spain, as she was preparing to return to China, it added.
Prosecutors said on the morning of Sept. 16, a museum
curator was notified by a cleaning staff member of debris inside the facility
and the disappearance of gold nuggets usually on display, which included an
11-pound nugget from Australia, items linked to the 19th century California
gold rush, and a nugget gifted by Tsar Nicholas I of Russia in 1833.
An investigation determined that two doors at the museum
were cut open with a circular saw. In the mineralogy gallery, the display case
containing the nuggets was broken into with a blowtorch, authorities said.
At the site, investigators found a screwdriver, saws, the
blowtorch and three gas canisters used to power the blowtorch, according to the
prosecutor’s office.
It said surveillance footage revealed that a single person
entered the museum by force around 1 a.m. on the morning of the heist.
The Paris Public Prosecutor’s Office estimated that the
financial loss of the gold nuggets is around $1.74 million, while an additional
$58,000 worth of damage was caused by the break-in. It also said the historical
and scientific value of the gold pieces was priceless.
The Paris Public Prosecutor’s Office estimated that the
financial loss of the gold nuggets is around $1.74 million, while an additional
$58,000 worth of damage was caused by the break-in. It also said the historical
and scientific value of the gold pieces was priceless.
At the time of her arrest in Barcelona, the suspect attempted to dispose
of around two pounds of melted gold pieces, prosecutors added.
They said the investigation remains ongoing, as authorities are trying to
figure out what happened to the stolen items and if there are any accomplices.
In France, the organized theft charge is punishable by up to 15 years in
prison.

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