A staggering 40 million euro ($53 million) worth of diamonds
and other jewels were stolen Sunday from the Carlton Intercontinental Hotel in
Cannes, in one of Europe's biggest jewelry heists recent years, police said.
The hotel in the sweltering French Riviera was hosting a
temporary jewelry exhibit over the summer from the prestigious Leviev diamond
house, which is owned by Israeli billionaire Lev Leviev.
A police spokesman said the theft took place around noon,
but he could not confirm local media reports that the robber was a single
gunman who stuffed a suitcase with the gems before making a swift exit. The
spokesman spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to
discuss the matter on the record.
Several police officers were placed in front of the Carlton
exhibition room to prevent journalists and photographers gathered at the scene
from entering.
The luxury Carlton hotel is situated on the exclusive
Promenade de la Croisette that stretches a mile and a half along the French
Riviera, and is thronged by the rich and famous throughout the year. The
hotel's position provides not only a beautiful view of the sea, but an easy get
away for potential jewel thieves along the long stretch of road.
The valuable gems were supposed to be on public display
until the end of August. It was not immediately clear how many pieces were
stolen.
Hotel officials would not comment, and attempts to reach
Leviev or his company were not immediately successful.
Several brazen jewelry thefts have taken place this year,
including one in Belgium on Feb. 18 that involved some $50 million worth of
diamonds.
In that heist, the stones from the global diamond center of
Antwerp had been loaded on a plane headed to Zurich when robbers dressed in
dark police clothing and hoods drove through a hole they'd cut in the Brussels
Airport fence in two black cars with blue police lights flashing. They drove
onto the tarmac, approached the plane, brandished machine guns, offloaded the
diamonds, then left in an operation that took barely five minutes.
Authorities have since detained dozens of people and
recovered much of the stolen treasure in that operation.
In May, Cannes was struck by two highly publicized jewelry
heists during the Cannes Film Festival.
In the first theft, robbers stole about $1 million worth of
jewels after ripping a safe from the wall of a hotel room. The jewelry was
taken from the Novotel room of an employee of Chopard, the Swiss-based watch
and jewelry maker that has loaned bling to A-list stars walking the red carpet
at the film festival.
And in the second, thieves outsmarted 80 security guards in
an exclusive hotel and made off with a De Grisogono necklace that creators say
is worth 2 million euros ($2.6 million.)
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