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Started By
Message
The director and head of security at the Louvre are still employed there after the theft
Posted on 12/16/25 at 10:49 am
Posted on 12/16/25 at 10:49 am
But to be fair the director did ‘offer her resignation’ which was ‘rejected’.
Imagine failing this badly at your job and being allowed to continue on like nothing happened.
Laurence des Cars
Dominique Buffin
The director hired the head of security. They are both firsts in their respective positions.
Imagine failing this badly at your job and being allowed to continue on like nothing happened.
Laurence des Cars
Dominique Buffin
The director hired the head of security. They are both firsts in their respective positions.
This post was edited on 12/16/25 at 11:06 am
Posted on 12/16/25 at 10:50 am to weagle1999
It might be illegal to fire a woman in France
Posted on 12/16/25 at 10:52 am to weagle1999
I thought that was Mr Bean in drag for a second
Posted on 12/16/25 at 10:53 am to weagle1999
The reality of this is that, whether digitally or physically, no matter how well someone tries to secure things, there will always be someone that is better at getting around that.
While i get that it falls on her, there will always be someone that can beat her best security measures.
There have been teenagers that have gotten into national security information and that’s extremely secure information. So it’s all part of the cat and mouse game
While i get that it falls on her, there will always be someone that can beat her best security measures.
There have been teenagers that have gotten into national security information and that’s extremely secure information. So it’s all part of the cat and mouse game
Posted on 12/16/25 at 10:57 am to Fat and Happy
quote:Wasn't the password to the security locks "louvre"?
While i get that it falls on her, there will always be someone that can beat her best security measures.
Posted on 12/16/25 at 10:58 am to weagle1999
Tough to get fired in France
Posted on 12/16/25 at 11:00 am to TDFreak
quote:
While i get that it falls on her, there will always be someone that can beat her best security measures.
Wasn't the password to the security locks "louvre"?
No. That was an audit from a decade ago that got brought back up for clicks, completely irrelevant to this heist.
Posted on 12/16/25 at 11:11 am to Fat and Happy
One can’t help but wonder if they weren’t ‘firsts’ if they would still be employed.
Posted on 12/16/25 at 11:13 am to weagle1999
Won't matter once they're replaced with muslims. Shouldn't be more than another year or two before that happens.
Posted on 12/16/25 at 11:17 am to CatfishJohn
quote:
Tough to get fired in France
Used to work for a German based company and according to the guys over there its damn near impossible to get fired. Like, you have to actively try to get them to remove you and even then its an up hill battle.
Posted on 12/16/25 at 11:23 am to weagle1999
I love this for them. Should signal to art thieves that the getting's good over there. Take whatever you want with likely very little "catburgler" effort.
The 2025 thieves stole 8 pieces of the French crown jewels valued at over $100M in under 8 minutes... even being caught by security guards but threatening them with power tools.
The 2025 thieves stole 8 pieces of the French crown jewels valued at over $100M in under 8 minutes... even being caught by security guards but threatening them with power tools.
Posted on 12/16/25 at 11:34 am to Fat and Happy
quote:
The reality of this is that, whether digitally or physically, no matter how well someone tries to secure things, there will always be someone that is better at getting around that.
While i get that it falls on her, there will always be someone that can beat her best security measures.
There have been teenagers that have gotten into national security information and that’s extremely secure information. So it’s all part of the cat and mouse game
This is not "no one could have done anything" territory. There were a ton of security failures and just plain incompetence.
There is a lot of info on this out there:
Total incompetence
Posted on 12/16/25 at 11:42 am to TDFreak
quote:
Wasn't the password to the security locks "louvre"?
123456
Posted on 12/16/25 at 11:48 am to weagle1999
The French by nature are a weak people so it's not surprising they're still in their roles. Hope it happens again 
Posted on 12/16/25 at 11:48 am to bad93ex
quote:
It might be illegal to fire a woman in France
At the rate they are going it might become illegal to hire one under Sharia Law
Posted on 12/16/25 at 1:15 pm to weagle1999
Apparently neither of them watch "heist" movies. There are dozens of movies about robbing museums, many of them specifically about robbing the Louvre.
Posted on 12/16/25 at 1:35 pm to weagle1999
That's because France has shite employment laws. You get sued almost any time you fire somebody.
Posted on 12/16/25 at 1:38 pm to Fat and Happy
quote:
The reality of this is that, whether digitally or physically, no matter how well someone tries to secure things, there will always be someone that is better at getting around that.
I hear your message, but the reality is also that the person hired to be chief security expert at one of the world's most famous & most valuable museums needs to do a little better than using a 6 character computer password
It's like hiring a Michelin chef but they can't make toast. You probably wouldn't hire them
Posted on 12/16/25 at 1:53 pm to bad93ex
quote:
It might be illegal to fire a woman in France
European employment laws are insane. We closed an office in Belgium and had to pay everyone for 5 years. Women have a year of maternity leave. Every time I email one of my colleagues in Europe I get an out of office message because of some bullshite holiday or policy those frickers are never at work
This post was edited on 12/16/25 at 1:54 pm
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