A Japanese businessman stepped out Hôtel Napoléon, located in the city’s famous 8th arrondissement, one of Paris’s elegant upmarket neighbourhoods, for a quick smoke when in a briefest of moments, he had his $800,000 Richard Mille Tourbillon Diamond Twister stolen off his wrist last Monday 9th October according to CNN.
The crime took place a stone’s throw away from high profile Parisian landmarks Arc de Triomphe and Champs-Elysées, interviewing the victim, CNN affiliate BFMTV, described the luxury watch theft incident as one where a 1.8 metre man wearing a parka, approached the Japanese businessman for a cigarette, common courtesy between smokers, and as he offered a stick to the stranger, his Richard Mille was snatched straight off his wrist.
With over $3 million worth of Timepieces stolen in the last 8 months, Paris has a Luxury Watch Theft Issue
Paris’s 8th arrondissement, the city’s famed luxury district has been ground zero for some of the city’s most high profile watch crimes. At its peak, four thefts involving watches totalling US$210,000 were stolen on August 29th alone; 71 cases have been reported since the start of 2019 till September and with this latest case, over $3 million worth of timepieces have been stolen to date.
The recent spate of luxury watch theft in the famed cultural capital is problematic given that it has been part of a new wave of crime where the thieves involved have been able to recognise the models at a glance. Previously, most thieves were only interested in Rolex, but now, the thefts are going beyond known luxury brands but focusing on high profile models from other less recognised but extremely prestigious marques. Furthermore, despite the other jewels and accessories, the thieves were only interested in the watches.
According to French National Police, unable to be sold online or at pre-owned stores, these watches fetch 30 to 50% of their value on the black market and these high profile thefts traditionally used to be the purview of international syndicates from Italy, North Africa and Eastern Europe but it appears that “enterprising” youth in the city have started to participate in this watch crime wave, leading to a 28% rise compared to the same period last year.
On Friday, 6 September, a 12 hour dragnet from 6pm to 6am, saw police operating around the Golden Triangle of Champs-Elysées recovering four watches from 15 people. Of the watches stolen this year, 13 are worth more than € 50,000 (eight of which exceed € 100,000), the latest €757,000 theft is the highest so far, Le Parisian covers the growing epidemic in detail. Check it out.
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