Investigations Police of Chile explained

Agencyname:Investigations Police of Chile
Nativename:Spanish; Castilian: Policía de Investigaciones de Chile
Abbreviation:PDI
Motto:Spanish; Castilian: Honor, Disciplina y Lealtad
Mottotranslated:Honour, Discipline and Loyalty
Formedyear:1933[1]
Formedmonthday:June 19
Country:Chile
National:Yes
Sizepopulation:18,191,884
Legaljuris:opsjuris
Police:Yes
Oversightbody:Dirección General
Headquarters:Santiago de Chile
Sworn:5,478 (2010) [2]
Minister1pfo:Ministry of National Defense (Chile)
Chief1name:Eduardo Cerna Lozano [3]
Chief1position:Director General
Stations:128

Investigations Police of Chile (PDI) are the civilian police of Chile. Founded in 1933, it is one of two Chilean police bodies, along with the law enforcement police: Carabineros de Chile.[4] The PDI is the principal law enforcement arm of the Public Prosecutor's Office of Chile in criminal investigation.

History

19th century

The first reference to police work in Chile is in the Police Regulation of 1803, where the terms "high police" and "public security" are used.[5] Then, in 1830, the Vigilantes and Serenos Corps of Santiago were created, whose work was followed throughout the country. In 1852 the Brigada de Policía was created in Santiago, where the Vigilantes and Serenos Corps were merged.

In the 1870s, the mayor of the city of Santiago, Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna proposed modelling the Brigada de Policía on the Agent de la Sûrete in Paris, France, which was based on the administrative structure of the police force. Ranks of Inspector, Comisario, and Prefecto (based on the French ranks of Inspecteur, Commissaire, and Préfet) were implemented, and that are still used today.

20th century

The modern Investigations Police was established in 1933 as a separate organization of civil police, independent from the control of the militarized Carabineros de Chile.

In March 2011, fence and arms dealer Italo Nolli shot and killed PDI detectives Marcelo Morales and Kiram Gallardo, the latter of which thus became the first female PDI member killed in the line of duty.[6]

Organization

The Investigative Police divides its investigation areas according to the crime investigated, counting with it several specialized units of police investigation, which have Detectives specialists, experts and experts in the respective areas.

National Headquarters of Crimes Against Human Rights and People

(JENADEP)

National Headquarters of Immigration and International Policing

(JENAEX)

National Headquarters against Robberies and Criminal Areas

(Spanish; Castilian: Jefatura Nacional contra Robos y Focos Criminales, JENACROF)

National Headquarters of Crimes against the family

(Spanish; Castilian: Jefatura Nacional de delitos contra la Familia, JENAFAM)

National Headquarters of Police Intelligence

(Spanish; Castilian: Jefatura Nacional de Inteligencia Policial, JENAIPOL)

National Headquarters of Economic and Environmental Crimes

(Spanish; Castilian: Jefatura Nacional de Delitos Económicos y Medioambiente, JENADEM)

National Headquarters of Counternarcotics and Anti-Organized Crime

(Spanish; Castilian: Jefatura Nacional Antinarcóticos y contra el Crimen Organizado, JENANCO)

National Headquarters of Criminalistics

(Spanish; Castilian: Jefatura Nacional de Criminalística, JENACRIM)

Criminal Investigation Brigades and others

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Efemérides. Policia. 30 January 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20120717151232/http://www.policia.cl/tareasescolares/efemerides/index.html. 17 July 2012. dead.
  2. http://www.pdichile.cl/cuentapublica2011/web/pdfs/total_pais.pdf Public Account 2011
  3. https://pdichile.cl/centro-de-prensa/detalle-prensa/2024/03/21/eduardo-cerna-lozano--nuevo-director-general-de-la-pdi
  4. http://www.bcn.cl/leyes/pdf/actualizado/242302.pdf Chilean Constitution
  5. Roberto Hernández Ponce; Jule Salazar González. "De la Policía Secreta a la Policía Científica" (2006, Santiago de Chile)
  6. Web site: 23 March 2011 . Comunicado de Prensa . . es.