Élysée
Palace staff member accused of stealing tableware worth up to €40,000
Silver
steward is one of three people arrested in connection with alleged theft from
presidential residence
Rory
Carroll
Sun 21
Dec 2025 14.37 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/dec/21/elysee-palace-staff-member-accused-stealing-tableware
A silver
steward employed at the Élysée Palace in Paris has been arrested for stealing
silverware and porcelain, amid a wave of thefts from high-profile French
institutions.
Investigators
arrested the man and two alleged accomplices last week. They are accused of
taking the objects from the official Paris residence of the French president
and trying to sell them on online auction websites such as Vinted.
The head
steward at the palace alerted authorities to the missing objects, some of which
are deemed items of national heritage. The items are estimated to have a
combined value of up to €40,000 (£35,000).
Most of
the pieces came from the Sèvres Manufactory in Paris, a famed porcelain factory
that has been owned by the French state since 1759. Investigators began to
question Élysée staff after factory personnel recognised some of the missing
items on auction sites.
The
alleged thefts are an unwelcome encore to a string of robberies from the Louvre
and other French museums in recent months that have raised concern about lax
safeguards at the country’s cultural institutions.
The role
of silver steward involves storing and looking after tableware and similar
items used by presidents, visiting royalty and other dignitaries. Prosecutors
said inventory records made by the arrested steward gave the impression he was
planning future thefts.
According
to investigators, the man’s Vinted account included a plate stamped “French Air
Force” and ashtrays marked “Sèvres Manufactory” – items not usually available
to the general public.
They said
they recovered about 100 objects in his home, vehicle and personal locker,
including Sèvres porcelain, a René Lalique statuette, Baccarat champagne coupes
and copper saucepans.
The
steward and his alleged accomplices appeared in court on 18 December and will
be tried on 26 February. The trio were placed under judicial supervision,
banned from contacting one another, prohibited from appearing at auction venues
and barred from their professional activities, the Associated Press reported.
The
recovered items were returned to the Élysée – a happier outcome than at the
Louvre, which is still missing crown jewels worth an estimated €88m (£77m)
after a daylight raid in October. Four suspects have been arrested in relation
to that case.
Other
French institutions targeted in recent months include Paris’s Natural History
Museum and a porcelain museum in Limoges. Both were raided in September, losing
six gold nuggets worth about €1.5m (£1.3m) and Chinese porcelain with an
estimated combined worth of €6.55m (£5.7m) respectively.
In
October, around 2,000 gold and silver coins worth about €90,000 (£78,000) were
stolen from the Maison des Lumières (House of Enlightenment), a museum in
Langres dedicated to the philosopher Denis Diderot.

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