{"type":"location","location":{"title":"Your Office - Deloitte Financial Crimes Division, São Paulo","description":"You sit in a sleek glass-walled office on the 23rd floor of a modernist tower in the Jardins district. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlook the sprawling São Paulo skyline, but your attention is fixed on the three case files spread across your desk. As a forensic accountant, you've seen your share of embezzlement schemes, but something about these three cases troubles you deeply.\n\nThe first file is for Petrobras subsidiary Minerais Brasil—$4.2 million diverted through shell companies. The second involves a real estate development firm, Construtora Horizonte—$2.8 million missing. The third is a smaller pharmaceutical distributor, Farmacêutica Amazônia—$1.1 million. On the surface, they seem unrelated: different industries, different suspects, different methods.\n\nBut you noticed something others missed. Each embezzlement funded archaeological expeditions. Minerais Brasil paid for 'geological surveys' in the Amazon. Construtora Horizonte 'invested' in 'historical site preservation.' Farmacêutica Amazônia sponsored 'academic research teams.'\n\nWhy would three different criminal networks independently choose archaeology as a money laundering front? That question has kept you awake at night.\n\nOn your desk sits your computer, the case files, and a handwritten note from your supervisor: 'Wrap these up. Corporate wants them closed.'\n\nYou have 40 hours before the cases are officially archived.","suggestedActions":["Examine the case files more closely for connections","Search your computer for financial transaction details","Call your supervisor to request more time","Review the archaeological expedition details from the case records"],"conversation":"0zzwbx59adfm8m5y432h4kj"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}