Joint Crisis Committees (JCC)
Heist at the museum
The Natural History Museum of London is home to 80 million historical artifacts, one of which is Hans Sloane's Nautilus Shell, carved by Johannes Belkien in the 1600s, valued at £13 million. It’s among the rarest and most valuable artifacts on display and has caught the eye of a group of highly skilled criminals. No one knows their real names; all that is known about them are their aliases. They have somehow managed to infiltrate the museum after closing and have taken five hostages with them.
The clever criminals have efficiently locked down the entire museum, making it impossible for the police to enter. Since they’re not interested in hurting anyone they’re unarmed, and police officers cannot use weapons to force their way in at the risk of damaging the building, the artifacts, or, worse, hurting the hostages.
This scandal is already all over the news, meaning it is crucial for police to find a safe way to extract the hostages without damaging the museum, and to arrest these criminals once and for all.
As tensions rise and time ticks away, the city holds its breath for the crime of the century.
Committees
Thieves
Police