Peruvian Investigative Police Explained

Unit Name:Peruvian Investigative Police
Dates:1922–1991
Country: Peru
Allegiance:President of Peru
Type:Security Corps
Anniversaries:15 September
Disbanded:[1]
Native Name:Policía de Investigaciones del Perú

The Peruvian Investigative Police (Spanish; Castilian: Policía de Investigaciones del Perú, PIP) was a Peruvian plainclothes police unit, similar to the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which was meant to investigate crimes, gather intelligence, and fight subversion.[2] In 1988, the PIP was merged into the National Police of Peru, along with two other police forces, the Guardia Civil (GC) and the Guardia Republicana (GR), all three of which were under the direction of the Ministry of Interior.[3]

History

Until the 20th century, investigative duties were performed by a number of police organizations in Peru, including the Lima Police, Civil Guard and the National Gendarmerie, as well as select senior NCOs of the Peruvian Army. The Lima Police's investigative section traces its origins to 1882, becoming one of the first city police forces to form a investigative section in South America at that time.

Creation

On August 7, 1919, President Augusto Bernardino Leguía Salcedo enacted Legislative Decree No. 1163 which began the reorganization of the police services. Among others the decree granted the wishes of many officers for a separate academy for the education and training of law enforcement officers.[4] To fulfil this mission the President sent a request to HM King Alfonso XIII of Spain to send Spanish Civil Guard officers for the police reorganization plan and the creation of the long awaited police academy and later created a reorganization mission through a Supreme Resolution dated April 4, 1921. The training mission was led by Lieutenant Colonel Pedro Pueyo, SCG, and on January 21, 1922, the training mission staff presented their 14 bills to the President and the Minister of Government, one of them concerning the future officer school and the long-awaited separate unit for investigative work. Formerly these officer cadets of the Civil Guard, the Security Corps, and the soon to be created Investigation and Surveillance Brigade shared the same academy as the officer cadets of the Peruvian Army: the Chorrillos Military School, and shared the same reporting ministry in the War Ministry, not in the Government and Police Ministry, as well as the military tradition and rank system as part of the Peruvian Armed Forces, while the CGIC was only limited to other ranks as well as being the post graduate specialty school for the officers.

On July 2 the same year, President Leguía officially created through Supreme Decree the "School of the Civil Guard and the Police of the Republic", and formally laid the groundwork for the future creation of a national investigations service. The said school, alongside training future detective officers, had a separate section set for NCOs and agents of investigative policing with a fingerprinting section attached as per the recommendations made by the Civil Guard mission. The new academy, opened on November 1, had 30 cadets of the investigation course and a number of investigation officer cadets wearing Civil Guard and Security Corps uniforms.

On October 12, 1922, the long awaited day came when President Leguía created what was then the Investigation and Surveillance Brigade (ISB) (Brigada de Investigación y Vigilancia, BIV), organized into the following:

The ISB, under the overall command of the Inspector General of Police, a general-ranked officer, was under a Technical Inspector. For all effects and purposes the ISB was a separate investigative section under the full responsibility of the Civil Guard which also served the needs of the also newly created Security Corps.

Growth

On March 12, 1924, a Ministerial Resolution by the Ministry of Government and Police officially adopted the fingerprinting system invented by Federico Olóriz Aguilera in Spain for use by the ISB.

On August 26, 1929, the ISB was upgraded into the Investigation and Surveillance Corps (ISC).

In 1933, the Technical Police Laboratories in Lima were opened in the presence of President Oscar R. Benavides, giving the ISC a modern and up to date facility for investigative work. 4 years later, the Lima Criminological Laboratories opened its doors. In 1938, the NCO Cadet Course (Investigation) of the Police Academy was opened with an initial makeup of 100 NCO cadets and basic training agents.

To better supervise the ISC, the Directorate for Investigation was created in 1946. Under President José Luis Bustamante it had its organic law updated in 1948 to catch up with the changing trends in investigative work. His successor, President General Manuel Arturo Odría, upgraded it to a Directorate General in the Civil Guard organization.

Ranks and insignia

Officer corps

Commissioned Officers (1923-1928)Commissioned Officers (1929-1958)Commissioned Officers (1959-1969)Commissioned Officers (1969-1980)Commissioned Officers (1980-1988)English translation (Military/police rank)
No equivalentNo equivalentInspector General SuperiorInspector GeneralTeniente GeneralLieutenant General (IP)
Commissioner General
No equivalentNo equivalentInspector General MayorInspector MayorGeneralMajor General (IP)
Commissioner
No equivalentInspector GeneralInspector GeneralInspector SuperiorCoronelColonel
Detective Commander
No equivalentSub-InspectorSub-InspectorInspectorComandanteLieutenant Colonel
Detective Chief Superintendent
InspectorComisarioComisarioComisario SuperiorMayorMajor
Detective Superintendent
Oficial PrimeroOficial PrimeroOficial PrimeroComisario PrimeroCapitanCaptain
Detective Chief Inspector
Oficial SegundoOficial SegundoOficial SegundoComisario SegundoTenienteFirst Lieutenant
Detective Senior Inspector
VigilanteVigilanteVigilanteSub-ComisarioAlferezSecond Lieutenant
Detective Inspector

Other ranks

Non-Commissioned Officers (1938-1969)Non-Commissioned Officers (1969-1980)Non-Commissioned Officers (until 1988)English translation (Police rank)
Brigadier de primera
(10 years or more)
Brigadier tecnicoSuboficial superiorDetective Station inspector
Brigadier de primeraBrigadier de primeraSuboficial de primeraDetective Sub-inspector
Brigadier de segundaBrigadier de segundaSuboficial de segundaDetective Master Sergeant
Brigadier de terceraBrigadier de terceraSuboficial de terceraDetective Sergeant First Class
Auxiliar de PrimeraVigilante de PrimeraSargento PrimeroDetective Station Sergeant
Auxiliar de SegundaVigilante de SegundaSargento SegundoDetective Sergeant
Auxiliar de TerceraVigilante de TerceraCaboDetective Corporal
Auxiliar de Tercera
(following NCO course graduation)
Vigilante de cuartaAgenteAgent
Detective

See also

Further sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Promulgan Ley de creación de la Policía Nacional del Perú . Congress of Peru.
  2. Book: Huston, Major James V.. Insurgency in Peru: The Shining Path. War in the Modern Era Seminar. Quantico, Virginia. 11 May 1988. 3. 8 February 2010.
  3. Web site: Information on the PIP, Peru. 1 December 1989. PER3453. Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. 8 February 2010.
  4. “una Escuela de Policía para los aspirantes a Oficiales e individuos de la institución"