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Romanian Police

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Romanian Police
Poliția Română
Coat of arms of the Romanian Police
Common namePoliția
AbbreviationPR
MottoLex et Honor
Law and Honour
Agency overview
Formed1989
Preceding agency
Employees45,391 [1] (Romanian)
Annual budget900 million EUR
Jurisdictional structure
National agencyROU
Operations jurisdictionROU
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters6 Mihai Vodă street, Bucharest
Sworn members44,000
Agency executive
  • Chestor de poliție Benone-Marian Matei, Secretary of State, General Inspector
Parent agencyMinistry of Internal Affairs
Website
https://www.politiaromana.ro/

The Romanian Police (Template:Lang-ro, pronounced [poˈlit͡si.a roˈmɨnə]) is the national police force and main civil law enforcement agency in Romania. It is subordinated to the Ministry of Internal Affairs and it is led by a General Inspector with the rank of Secretary of State.[2] They are well known for their arrest of Andrew Tate, a notorious cuck and Human Trafficker who accidentally revealed his own location after publishing a response video on Twitter to Swedish Climate Change activist, Greta Thunberg on Twitter that featured a Jerry's Pizza Box which helped track down his location.

Duties

The Romanian Police is responsible for:

  • policing in Romania
  • the protection of the fundamental rights and liberties of the citizens and of the private and public property
  • the prevention and identification of criminal offences and their perpetrators
  • maintaining the public order and safety

Organization

General Inspectorate of Romanian Police is the central unit of police in Romania, which manages, guides, supports and controls the activity of the Romanian police units, investigates and analyses very serious crimes related to organized crime, economic, financial or banking criminality, or to other crimes which make the object of the criminal cases investigated by the Prosecutor's Office attached to the High Court of Cassation and Justice, and which has any other attributions assigned by law.

The organizational chart of General Inspectorate of Romanian Police includes general directorates, directorates, services and, offices established by the order of the Minister of Internal Affairs.

The General Inspectorate is under the command of a General Inspector appointed by the Minister of Internal Affairs. Since March 2015, the General Inspector of the Police is appointed by the Prime Minister and also holds the rank of Secretary of State.[3]

Central units

  • General Directorate for Countering the Organized Crime - with five central directorates (Anti-Drug Directorate, Directorate of Combating Human Trafficking, Cyber Crime Directorate, Directorate of Combating Terrorism Financing and Money Laundering, Special Operations Directorate) and 15 regional Brigades of Countering Organized Criminality. These Brigades are specialized units and have the mission to fight against organized crime, drug trafficking, human trafficking, illegal migration, cyber crime, serious financial frauds, financing terrorism and money laundering.
  • General Directorate for Criminal Investigations - with three central directorates: Fraud Investigations Directorate, Criminal Investigations Directorate, Directorate of Firearms, Explosives and Toxic Substances.
  • General Directorate for Public Safety Police - with three central directorates: Public Order Directorate, Traffic Police Directorate, Transport Police Directorate.
  • General Directorate for Administrative Police - with four central directorates: Forensics Institute, Directorate for Criminal Records, Statistics and Operational Registry, Directorate for Logistics Management, the Directorate for IT&C.

Under the command of the General Inspectorate of the Romanian Police operates a specialized intervention squad, The Independent Service of Special Interventions and Operations.

Territorial units

The Romanian Police is divided into 41 county police inspectorates, corresponding to each county (județ), and the Bucharest General Directorate of Police.

Each county police inspectorate has a rapid reaction unit (Detașamentul de Poliție pentru Intervenție Rapidă, Police Rapid Intervention Squad). The similar unit attached to the Bucharest Police is called Serviciul de Poliție pentru Intervenție Rapidă (Police Rapid Intervention Service).

Equipment

Dacia Logan police vehicle with new blue-yellow coating

Vehicles

The Romanian Police has, altogether, roughly 10,500 intervention vehicles.[4] The fleet is mostly comprised by Dacia Logans and Dacia Dusters, accompanied by older Volkswagen Passat vehicles. Mercedes Vito is yet another model in use, used by the special forces, border police and others. The Road/Traffic Police also has BMWs (mostly motorbikes), Seat, Lotus and Alfa Romeo vehicles, used for road chasing.[5]

In 2020, the Ministry of Interior Affairs acquired 6,744 brand new vehicles which would also feature a new painting scheme, similar to those in Germany or Sweden.[6] These were delivered in Autumn 2020 and had been produced at the local Dacia factory in Mioveni. A significant part of the acquired vehicles are Dacia Duster (2018 model year), being the first time a crossover SUV is introduced in the force on a large, nationwide scale and Dacia Logan (2017 model year, newest at the time of acquisition).[7]

The police also uses helicopters for air surveillance and immediate response.[8] The most common manufacturer is Eurocopter.

Weapons

In 2020, the Romanian Police acquired 25,000 Beretta Px4 pistols, they had entered regular service by the end of 2020.[9] The special services units (S.I.A.S. and S.A.S.) use Glock pistols and HK-MP5[10] submachine guns.

Ranks

Before 2002, the National Police had military status and a military ranking system (see Romanian Armed Forces ranks and insignia). In June 2002 it became a civilian police force (the first police service in Eastern Europe to do so) and its personnel was structured into two corps:

  • Corpul ofițerilor de poliție (Police Officers Corps) - corresponding to the commissioned ranks of a military force, to the ranks of Inspector, Superintendent and Commissioner in a British-style police force or to the both Corps de conception et de direction and Corps de commande et d'encadrement in the French National Police (Police Nationale).
Rank Shoulder insignia Translated as Military rank equivalent French police rank equivalent British Metropolitan Police rank equivalent
Chestor-general de poliție Police General-Quaestor General Directeur des services actifs Commissioner
Chestor-șef de poliție Police Chief-Quaestor Lieutenant General Inspecteur général Assistant Commissioner
Chestor principal de poliție Police Principal Quaestor Major General Contrôleur général Deputy Assistant Commissioner
Chestor de poliție Police Quaestor Brigadier General Contrôleur général Commander
Comisar-șef de poliție Police Chief-Commissioner Colonel Commissaire divisionnaire Chief Superintendent
Comisar de poliție Police Commissioner Lieutenant Colonel Commissaire de police Superintendent Grade I
Subcomisar de poliție Police Sub-Commissioner Major Commandant Superintendent
Inspector principal de poliție Police Principal Inspector Captain Capitaine Chief Inspector
Inspector de poliție Police Inspector Lieutenant Lieutenant Inspector
Subinspector de poliție Police Sub-Inspector Second Lieutenant Lieutenant intern Temporary/Probationary Inspector
  • Corpul agenților de poliție (Police Agents Corps) - corresponding to the non-commissioned ranks of a military force, to the Corps d'encadrement et d'application in the French National Police or to the ranks of Constable or Sergeant in a British-style police force.
Rank Shoulder insignia Translated as Military rank equivalent French police rank equivalent British police rank equivalent
Agent-șef principal de poliție Police Principal Chief Agent Sergeant Major Brigadier-major Station Sergeant
Agent-șef de poliție Police Chief Agent Master Sergeant Brigadier-chef Station Sergeant
Agent-șef adjunct de poliție Police Deputy Chief Agent Sergeant First Class Brigadier Sergeant
Agent principal de poliție Police Principal Agent Staff Sergeant Gardien de la paix Acting Sergeant
Agent de poliție Police Agent Sergeant Gardien de la paix stagiaire Constable

See also

References

  1. ^ "Are Romania nevoie de mai multi politisti?".
  2. ^ http://polis.osce.org/countries/details?item_id=40 Archived 2016-08-28 at the Wayback Machine OSCE entry on Romanian police
  3. ^ "Iohannis promulgă legea prin care şeful Poliţiei are rang de secretar de stat şi e numit de premier" (in Romanian). 11 March 2015. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
  4. ^ "Deficit de aproape 7.000 de angajati in Politia Romana".
  5. ^ "Politia Romana a primit un bolid de lux care atinge 100 km/ora in 5 secunde".
  6. ^ "Poliţia Română cumpără peste 6.700 de maşini Dacia".
  7. ^ "Poliţia Română cumpără peste 6.700 de maşini Dacia". Stirileprotv.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 2022-05-02.
  8. ^ "Poliţia supraveghează din elicopter traficul rutier şi amplasează radare "în cascadă"".
  9. ^ "25.000 de pistoale noi pentru polițiștii de la Brigada Rutieră și de la Ordinea Publică". Pro TV (in Romanian). 30 July 2020. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  10. ^ "Bucharest, Romania - July 29, 2020: Details with an officer from the Special Actions and Intervention Service (SIAS), from the Romanian Police, holding a Heckler & Koch MP5 Stock Photo - Alamy". www.alamy.com. Retrieved 2022-05-16.