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The National Police (French: police nationale), formerly the Sûreté Nationale, is one of two national police forces and the main civil law enforcement agency of France, with primary jurisdiction in cities and large towns. The other main agency is the military Gendarmerie, with primary jurisdiction in smaller towns and rural and border areas. The National Police comes under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of the Interior and has about 150,000 employees. The National Police operate mostly in large cities and towns. In that context:
[edit] OrganizationThe police is divided into directorates, headed by the DGPN (Direction Générale de la Police nationale, General Directorate of the National Police) [1]:
[edit] Former directoratesAs of 1 July 2008, the following two National Police directorates:
were merged into one single domestic intelligence agency titled the Direction centrale du renseignement intérieur (DCRI). The DCRI was placed directly under the Ministry of the Interior.[1] The current director is Bernard Squarcini, then the director of the DST, who had also formerly served as second-in-command of the RG. [edit] RanksThe National Police is divided into three corps, in the terminology of the French Civil Service, in ascending order of seniority:
All the ranks insignia may be worn either on the shoulders or on the chest. In the latter they are squared-shaped instead of being rectangular. Prior to 1995 two civilian corps ("Inspecteurs" and "Enquêteurs") existed in which plain-clothes officers were given the training and authority to conduct investigations. The closest Anglo-American equivalent is the detective. The powers of making a full arrest, hearing suspects, overseeing searches ordered by the judiciary, etc., are restricted to members of the police or the gendarmerie with the qualification of "officer of judiciary police" (officier de police judiciaire or OPJ). Other officers are only "agents of judiciary police" (agents de police judiciaire or APJ) and have only limited authority, restricted to assisting the officers. See Law enforcement in France. [edit] Equipment[edit] WeaponsFor many years the standard sidearm in the French Police National and the Gendarmerie Nationale was the Beretta 92FS. However, in 2003 both agencies made the biggest small weapons contract since World War II[citation needed] about 250,000 specially developed SIG SP 2022, based on the older SIG P226. The weapons are planned to stay in service until the year 2022. [edit] CarsWhile the vast majority of vehicles are screenprinted French brand (mainly Renault, Citroen and Peugeot), some service vehicles are provided by Ford and Opel. Plain clothes officers or specialised branches use vehicles from a variety of builders.
[edit] Aircraft inventory
The Police operates 45 helicopters.
[edit] See also[edit] References
[edit] External links
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