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Inspector Clouseau? The mystery man in an AP photo after the Louvre jewel heist creates a buzz

Police officers block an access to the Louvre museum after a robbery Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025, in Paris. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus) (Thibault Camus, Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

PARIS โ€“ It was shortly after the stunning heist of the crown jewels at the Louvre when Paris-based Associated Press photographer Thibault Camus caught in his frame a dapperly dressed young man walking by uniformed French police officers, their car blocking one of the museum gates.

Instinctively, he took the shot.

It wasn't a particularly great photo, with someone's shoulder obscuring part of the foreground, Camus told himself.

But it did the job โ€” showing French police sealing off the world's most-visited museum after the brazen daylight robbery last Sunday.

Plus, Camus figured, the guy walking past the officers was unusually well dressed, in a coat, a jacket and tie and wearing a fedora, adding a touch of Paris couture to the scene.

And so off went the photo to AP's worldwide audiences.

From there, fertile imaginations sprung into high gear โ€” whipping up an online buzz.

Posts on social media declared the well-dressed man to be a French detective โ€” if you will, a more dashing version of the famed Inspector Clouseau from โ€œPink Pantherโ€ movies โ€” even though AP's photo caption had not identified him.

It simply read: โ€œPolice officers block an access to the Louvre museum after a robbery Sunday, Oct. 19, 2025, in Paris.โ€

A post on X that now has 5.6 million views says: โ€œActual shot (not AI!) of a French detective working the case of the French Crown Jewels that were stolen from the Louvre."

Another poster โ€” with 1.2 million followers โ€” claimed the man โ€œwho looks like he came out of a detective film noir from the 1940s is an actual French police detective whoโ€™s investigating the theft."

Camus says nothing he saw led him to that conclusion โ€” the man was just someone who streamed away from the Louvre as authorities evacuated the area, Camus says.

โ€œHe appeared in front of me, I saw him, I took the photo,โ€ Camus says. โ€œHe passed by and left.โ€

If the unidentified man really is one of the more than 100 investigators hunting for the jewel thieves, the authorities are keeping it very hush-hush.

โ€œWeโ€™d rather keep the mystery alive ;)โ€ the Paris prosecutorโ€™s office said with a wink in an email response to AP questions.