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They stand among the most visited institutions in the world — grand neoclassical facades housing irreplaceable objects of human civilization, attended by millions each year, insured for sums that strain comprehension. And yet, with a frequency that would astonish the casual visitor, museums have proven to be among the most penetrable repositories of value in the modern world. Not because their curators were careless, or their directors indifferent, but because the very nature of a museum — open, inviting, architecturally complex, staffed by underpaid guards managing vast physical spaces — creates vulnerabilities that determined thieves have exploited with remarkable consistency across more than a century of documented cases. The fragility of museum security is not a modern discovery. In 1911, Vincenzo Peruggia walked out of the Louvre with the Mona Lisa hidden under his coat, having spent the previous night concealed inside the building. The theft went undetected for twenty-six hours. At the Gardner Museum in Boston, two thieves posing as police officers talked their way past the front desk in the early hours of March 18, 1990, and spent eighty-one minutes removing thirteen works valued at over five hundred million dollars — works that have never been recovered. In each case, the failure was not merely technological but institutional: a culture within museums that prioritized public access and aesthetic experience over the unglamorous mechanics of physical security, and that consistently underestimated the sophistication of those who viewed their collections as targets.
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