Doggerland Mob

The Doggerland Mob is a mob family that has been active in Doggerland since the 1930s. It first started out as a predominantly Catholic Dutch group of men, but now has members from all backgrounds. They are most active around the southern cities of Mistlân, Rotsibaai, Kensingston, and Graki. They have carried out numerous assassinations and assassination attempts against politicians and other Dogger citizens in their history.

Netherlands
A group of three Dutch Catholic brothers named Johannes, Hendrik and Benjamin Brink, started to do pickpocketing in the early 1920s, when they were kicked out of their home for being disobedient by their mother Ethel. They did not know who their father was. They were pickpockets in Amsterdam, but would sometimes work in The Hague or Rotterdam. They were all very good pickpockets, one time even pick pocketing the Netherlands Minister of Finance Dirk Jan de Geer, who would later become Prime Minister. Whenever they would steal something, they would always sell it on the black market, or sometimes jewelers who knew what the brothers were doing but didn't notify the police because it was great for their business. When Hendrik bought a house in the rich Amsterdam neighborhood of Museumkwartier for him and his brothers, the bank had notified the police of such a big purchase. The police came to the house to ask questions to Hendrik and Benjamin who were at the house at the time. Hendrik told the police that they had inherited a large sum of money after their father had passed away a year ago. The police believed them, thought nothing of it, and left the house. A few months later, one of the policeman who had came to the house saw in the newspaper obituaries that the real father of the Brinks had died, and was suspicious about how the Brink brothers had afforded that house if their father actually didn't pass away about a year ago. He notified the other policeman who had gone to the house in Museumkwartier with him a few months earlier, and they both decided to go back for questioning. Again, Hendrik and Benjamin were at the house at the time. They asked about the Brink who was in the newspaper obituaries, and the brothers said that the Brink who had died was their uncle. The obituary said that the late Brink had once been married to someone named Ethel, and one of the policeman noticed a tattoo that said "Ethel" on Hendrik's right forearm. He asked about the tattoo and Hendrik claimed that Ethel was their dead aunt, but the obituary stated that Ethel was still alive. At this point, Johannes walked into the house through the backdoor, and started talking to his brothers about a great pocket watch he had just stole. He then realized the police were there. The police drew their guns on the boys, and Johannes fired at the police with a pistol. He hit one of them who immediately died, and the other policeman started to take cover. Hendrik and Benjamin were hiding under a coffee table while Johannes was exchanging gunfire with the alive policeman, until Johannes eventually killed the policeman. The boys knew they would have to leave Amsterdam, so they hopped in one of the police cars and started to drive all the way to Westpoort, an industrial area of Amsterdam where cargo ships land. When they were about to get to Westpoort, they noticed a police car chasing them. Benjamin tried to shoot out their tires but failed. Johannes, who was driving, noticed a cargo ship leaving. He drove to the end of a dock and told the boys to run onto the cargo ship while he covered them. Hendrik and Benjamin ran onto the ship with Johannes again exchanging gunfire with the police. Eventually the police ran out of ammo so Johannes ran towards the cargo ship as fast as he could, trying to catch up with it before it left the port. He got onto the ship with barely any time left, and the police had lost the Brink brothers.

Starting out in Doggerland
The cargo ship that the brothers had been traveling on was heading for Nandels Port, Brun-Nord. The Brinks got off at the large port there and decided to head to Mistlân, Zuidvis after hearing about the large Dutch population there.