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Paris Jewel Heist Nets Cross-Dressing Robbers $100 Million

JAMEY KEATEN | December 5, 2008 06:33 PM EST | AP

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A woman walks past the Harry Winston jewelry store near the Champs-Elysees in Paris, Friday Dec. 5, 2008. Armed robbers, some dressed in drag, made off Thursday, Dec. 4, 2008 with euro80 million (USD100 million) in loot from a lightning-fast jewelry store theft in central Paris, in what police Friday called one of France's costliest jewel heists. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

PARIS — Armed robbers wearing women's wigs and clothing made off with diamond rings, gem-studded bracelets and other jewelry worth $108 million from a Harry Winston boutique in Paris, in one of the world's largest jewel heists.

As Christmas shoppers strolled outside, the gunmen forced store employees to strip rings, necklaces and earrings from window displays and pull more out of safes, Isabelle Montagne, spokeswoman for the Paris prosecutor's office, said Friday.

The brazen robbery early Thursday evening took place in the presence of security guards and security cameras in one of Paris' toniest shopping locales, just steps away from the tourist-filled Champs-Elysees. Besides Harry Winston, Nina Ricci, Gucci, Chanel and Dior are among the fashion houses with boutiques on the Avenue Montaigne.

The robbers threatened the 15 employees with handguns and hit some on the head, according to a police official who cannot be identified under agency policy. The robbers spoke a foreign language at times and appeared to know employees' names, the official said.

Montagne said there was only one client in the store at the time, and no one was injured and no weapons were fired. She called the incident "very well-organized," and said three of the four gunmen were dressed as women and wore wigs.

Investigators seized the store's surveillance tapes and police said one group under suspicion was the so-called "Pink Panthers," a ring of jewel thieves mostly from the former Yugoslavia. The international police agency Interpol has blamed the group for jewel thefts in 19 countries in Europe, Asia and the Persian Gulf worth more than $150 million over the past 10 years.

Paris' Harry Winston boutique was targeted in a similar heist last year, when three thieves made off with $28.4 million worth of jewels after forcing employees to open safes. They were never caught.

French police called Thursday's robbery one of the world's costliest jewel thefts. Five years ago, robbers plundered 123 maximum-security vaults in Antwerp, Belgium, stealing $100 million worth of diamonds in what was then considered the biggest jewel theft.

The Paris robbers chose one of the world's most glamorous targets: Harry Winston jewels have adorned Queen Elizabeth, Elizabeth Taylor, Madonna and numerous Hollywood celebrities. The jeweler is famous for its one-of-a-kind diamond-studded pendants, opulent chandelier earrings and colored diamonds in vivid shades of yellow, blue and pink.

"We are cooperating with the authorities in their investigation. Our first concern is the well-being of our employees," New York-based Harry Winston said. Rhonda Barnat, a spokeswoman for the company, did not provide further details.

The boutique was closed Friday, and three of its five display windows stood empty of their usual stunning jewelry. Vendors at the nearby Louis Vuitton and Max Mara boutiques said they did not notice anything unusual Thursday _ until police sirens wailed.

Harry Winston declared to insurers that the stolen goods were worth $108 million (euro85 million), the Paris prosecutor's office said.

Geoff Field, CEO of the British Jewelers' Association, called it a "pretty sensational" robbery, but added: "There are well-known gangs around looking to target high-value diamonds."

He stressed the stolen jewels would be difficult to sell "through any legitimate channels."

"They will undoubtedly be certified," he said, adding: "There will be a record of their quality, their cut, their weight, their color, and they will be identifiable."

Passers-by at the Harry Winston store wondered the same thing Friday.

"How do you fence it? How do you get rid of it?" asked tourist Richard Conacher, a 39-year-old hotelier from Melbourne, Australia. "You'd have to think they were famous pieces."

A half-century ago, company founder Harry Winston donated the Hope Diamond _ the world's largest blue diamond and famed for the bad luck that it brought its owners _ to the Smithsonian Institution.

Thursday's robbery comes as a security monitoring group for the French jewelry industry has reported a 20 percent rise in armed robberies over last year, with 132 taking place through November.

___

Associated Press writers Jean-Pierre Verges, Pierre-Antoine Souchard and Angela Charlton contributed to this report.

Filed by Anya Strzemien  |  Report Corrections
 
 
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
05:09 PM on 12/06/2008
Paris needs Drag-net
12:33 PM on 12/06/2008
I hope they catch the perpetrators. Brazen robberies like this are such a drag on the overall economy.
09:26 PM on 12/05/2008
Drag queens in need of money? Does Giuliani have an alibi? These are tough times, indeed.
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11:19 AM on 12/06/2008
California should pass a law slapping additional penalties on this sort of thing.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jalapeno
Atheist and lovin' it!
02:37 PM on 12/06/2008
What the hell is that supposed to mean?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrEguy
find your voice and speak!
05:36 PM on 12/07/2008
This happened in Paris, as in France.
09:25 PM on 12/05/2008
It was sooo an inside job, the robbers knew employees names for christ sake....funny how they target an American brand instead of Cariter, or Bulgari or Van Cleefs...100 mill, thats a big robbery, One of those workers is in on it...they probably supplied photos to each robber and tested them on names and faces...they probably said dont kill or shoot anyone because they were friends with the employees....Trust me, im sure they have ways of selling that stuff in the black market, just go take a ride to russia, tons of billionaires there who would love to get their wives and mistresses somthing fancy...and at a discounted price!
08:59 PM on 12/05/2008
It's much easier and willing to let women, or drag, to come into your store...than a group of males. Smart.

I doubt it was an inside job, I mean it's world renowned Harry Winston jewelers....they wouldn't do it for the insurance money scam.

Of that $108 million, I wonder how much of that is their huge markup.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jalapeno
Atheist and lovin' it!
02:39 PM on 12/06/2008
And where were the cops? Smoking a cigarette no doubt.
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westcoastsc
Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhe
08:04 PM on 12/05/2008
Sounds like an inside job. With this economy, people come up with ingenious ways to get it back. I'm sure it is all insured. They knew the workers' names.
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imusintheevening
With,without,who'll deny it's whatthe fights about
07:41 AM on 12/06/2008
Knowing their names is only an indication that they had cased the heist thoroughly and were prepared, not of inside assistance.
07:17 PM on 12/05/2008
Oh I wish, I wish, I wish DIVINE were alive to enjoy this Crime Of Glamour!!
09:20 PM on 12/05/2008
HA HA DIVINE WOULD HAVE LOVED IT!....Waters should totally do a jewel heist movie...Have you seen A Dirty Shame?
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RealPlumber
06:48 PM on 12/05/2008
Curiously one drag queen robber kept winking and saying you betcha.
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vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
01:22 AM on 12/06/2008
ROTFLMAO

now THAT was funny
01:56 PM on 12/06/2008
Ditto...Twice!!!!
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11:34 AM on 12/06/2008
Good one.
I blew coffe out my nose!
06:25 PM on 12/05/2008
That's wild! We've actually got a band of robbers in drag down here in New Orleans who terrorize lower Magazine St. boutiques.
05:58 PM on 12/05/2008
Score one for the little guy.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
realitycheck7
06:24 PM on 12/05/2008
something tells me that these people aren't necessarily the most deserving of the loot they ran away with
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
msjimmied
08:45 PM on 12/05/2008
No, I am. Sorry. I have the soul of a magpie...if it shines, I WANT it!
05:10 PM on 12/05/2008
Wow, I guess women's clothes really are more expensive than men's stuff.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
realitycheck7
04:30 PM on 12/05/2008
if they are able to go into a store like that and successfully walk away with that much, the store has inadequate security
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
kellygrrrl
04:26 PM on 12/05/2008
must have been the auto CEOs looking for Christmas gifts for the mistresses
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django707
never let the truth get in the way of a good story
03:48 PM on 12/05/2008
Now, these are thieves I can appreciate. Robbing completely unnecessary luxury items from the shops that service the wives and mistresses of the corporate thieves! Vive la drag queens!
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vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
01:24 AM on 12/06/2008
Robina Hood
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Whatashame
03:44 PM on 12/05/2008
Why didn't I think about that.