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Louvre Faces Double Blow with Fraud Arrests and Water Damage

By Jamie Sullivan · Saturday, February 14, 2026
Finn's Take· TL;DR
  • €10 million ticket fraud scheme uncovered involving nine suspects who reused tickets and paid Louvre staff bribes over decade.
  • Water damage from burst pipe destroyed 1819 ceiling painting; marks second flood in three months at struggling museum.
  • Louvre faces mounting crises including October crown jewels heist, infrastructure deterioration, staff strikes, and 45% ticket price hike.
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Massive Ticket Fraud Scheme Exposed

The world's most famous museum has been rocked by revelations of an elaborate fraud scheme that cost the Louvre an estimated loss of more than €10 million ($11.8 million) over the past decade. Nine people were detained this week, including two Louvre employees, several tour guides and one person suspected of being the organizer of the fraud ring .

The scheme began to unravel when the museum alerted investigators about the frequent presence of two Chinese tour guides suspected of bringing groups of Chinese tourists into the museum by fraudulently reusing the same tickets multiple times for different visitors . Surveillance and wiretaps confirmed repeated ticket reuse and an apparent strategy of splitting up tour groups to avoid paying the required "speaking fee" imposed on guides .

Investigators believe the network may have brought in up to 20 tour groups a day over the past decade , with guides allegedly paying accomplices within the Louvre cash in exchange for avoiding ticket checks . Authorities seized more than €957,000 ($1.13 million) in cash associated with the scheme, along with €486,000 ($576,374) held in various bank accounts , while suspects are believed to have invested some of the money in real estate in France and Dubai .

Water Damage Compounds Museum's Troubles

As if the fraud scandal wasn't enough, water from a heating supply pipe in a technical room hit a ceiling painted by Charles Meynier on Thursday night. The work occupies room 707, at the entrance to the paintings department in the Denon wing , the same area that houses some of the museum's most valuable collections.

The work on the ceiling shows two tears in the same area, caused by the water, and lifting of the pictorial layer on the ceiling and its arches . The painted ceiling, dating from 1819, was damaged by the leak on Thursday night . While the ceiling does not present any structural problems according to the chief architect, the incident forced temporary closures of several gallery rooms.

This marks the second flood in less than three months . A water leak in late November damaged several hundred works in the Louvre's Egyptian department, and management had to shut a gallery housing ancient Greek ceramics in October because ceiling beams above it threatened to give way .

Broader Crisis at the World's Most Visited Museum

These latest setbacks add to a mounting crisis at the Louvre, which welcomed nine million visitors last year . In October, the crown jewels robbery at the Louvre drew worldwide attention to the museum, after a team of four people broke in through a window during visiting hours and fled with an estimated 88 million euros ($104 million) worth of treasures .

The Louvre's chief architect Francois Chatillon conceded in front of MPs in November that the building was "not in a good state" . The museum has also faced staff strikes over working conditions and security concerns, while the museum raised ticket prices by 45 percent for non-European Union tourists last month to raise funds to help with the institution's refurbishment .

The convergence of fraud, infrastructure failures, and security breaches reveals deeper institutional challenges that go beyond any single incident. As the Louvre grapples with these multiple crises, questions about leadership and long-term planning become increasingly urgent. The museum's ability to maintain its status as a global cultural treasure while addressing these fundamental operational issues will likely define its future for years to come.

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