In October 2025, after a heist in broad daylight at the Louvre Museum in Paris left many people stunned, a photograph of a purported dapper detective on the case went viral.
The image showed a man in a suit, coat and hat,
Actual shot (not AI!) of a French detective working the case of the French Crown Jewels that were stolen from the Louvre in a brazen daylight robbery.
Somehow he looks like he's smoking even without a cigarette in his hand, but surely everything you know about life is screaming at you: this case is officially screwed!
To solve it, we need an unshaven, overweight, washed-out detective who's in the middle of divorce. A functioning alcoholic who the rest of the department hates.
Never gonna crack it with a detective who wears an actual fedora unironically.
(X user @MsMelChen)
The image was a real photograph, meaning it was not the product of artificial-intelligence software, but there was no evidence the man was a detective assigned to work the heist case at the Louvre. Rather, according to a New York Times interview with the photographer who took the image, he appeared to just be a passerby. In an interview with The Associated Press, 15-year-old Pedro Elias Garzon Delvaux said that he was the individual in the photograph taken outside the Louvre.
Snopes reached out to the Paris police, the prosecutor's office and the photographer who captured the image to determine more about the man's identity. We will update this post as soon as we learn more.
The original photograph was taken by Associated Press photographer
(Associated Press)
Another photograph Camus took at the same scene, with the same uniformed police officers, showed a woman walking over the spot where the man stood. Comparing these two photographs suggests that the man was simply another passerby Camus' camera captured walking past the officers.
The investigative team searching for the robbers behind the Louvre heist is very large. Laure Beccuau, a Paris prosecutor in the
Delvaux reportedly told The Associated Press that he had come to the Louvre that day with his mother and grandfather: "We wanted to go to the Louvre, but it was closed," he said. "We didn't know there was a heist."
He added that he liked to dress in such a manner and was inspired by 20th-century historical figures and fictional detectives: "I like to be chic. I go to school like this."
The heist occurred Oct. 19, when thieves broke into the Louvre and took jewelry that included tiaras, earrings and necklaces that experts said had "incalculable" value. The Louvre museum director told the French Senate that a diadem, one of the stolen items, was recovered but damaged. An AP report described the investigation as a race against time for both authorities and the perpetrators, who experts predicted would have a difficult time finding buyers for the items.
