The Police of the Czech Republic (
Czech: Policie České republiky) is the national
law enforcement agency of the
Czech Republic. It was established on 15 July 1991 under the jurisdiction of the
Ministry of the Interior. The agency is tasked with protecting citizens, property and public order and as of 2015, there were around 40,500 employees.[2] Czech state police cooperates with
municipal police departments, which are present in local municipalities.
History
The Police of the Czech Republic took over land management after the communist SNB in the Czech Republic with the exception of military police (provosts) who are part of the army. Members were recruited from the former communist
SNB (National Security Corps), after passing a vetting "democratic" commission established after the Velvet Revolution in 1989 to eliminate from the police force communist ideologues and agents of the
secret police. A similar procedure was also undertaken in the then-Slovak Republic. Some police officers were employed by a small federal police force, whose mandate expired on 31 December 1992.
The Police of the Czech Republic has general jurisdiction in the investigation of misdemeanors and crimes. Its proceedings are overseen by an independent prosecutor, who can bring charges in criminal matters. It does not have jurisdiction in fields falling within the competence of other specialized bodies, such as the Customs service, military police, judicial guard or the Secret service. PČR is the main investigative body of the Ministry of the Interior. It should not be confused with the
municipal police, which may be established by a municipality and which supervises public order and road safety;
municipal police also have jurisdiction only over
misdemeanours, and in criminal investigations may serve only in a supportive role for the state police.
The Police of the Czech Republic is responsible for search and rescue operations and on this behalf cooperates with
Mountain Rescue Service of the Czech Republic that is highly professional rescue agency.
On-duty officers are obliged to carry service weapons depending on the nature of their work (administrative vs. field work) or by their superior executive officer ordinance.
Regardless of being assigned to nationwide or regional units all police officers while on or off-duty have the right (and obligation) to act if the crime or serious offense is happening and life, health or property may be in imminent danger. Civilian employees of police are obliged to act only while on-duty.[3] Generally, police officers are not allowed to carry service weapons while off-duty if not approved by regional or unit police chief, which is on condition that their life may be in serious immediate danger. If a police officer still wants to carry a weapon off-duty, he/she has to use their personal handgun like any other armed citizen. Off-duty officers can use their personal weapon when acting as a police officer (which makes him on-duty).
National Headquarters Against Organized Crime of the Criminal Police and Investigation Service - created in August 2016 by joining two nationwide operating units of the Criminal Police and Investigation Service:[5]
Unit for Organized Crime
Unit for Corruption and Financial Criminality
National Drug Headquarters of the Criminal Police and Investigation Service[5]
Unit for Special Operations of the Criminal Police and Investigation Service - cover IDs,
undercover cops, fake money transfers, short-term protection of important crime witnesses (support unit, no investigation)
Unit for Intelligence Gathering of the Criminal Police and Investigation Service -
wiretapping,
personal surveillance, etc. (support unit, no investigation)[5]
Office of Documentation and Investigation of Crime of Communism of the Criminal Police and Investigation Service
Police officers serving under regional HQs are usually organized in the following sections:[6]
Public Order Police Service (Služba pořádkové policie) - general and largest, most versatile, police officers on general patrolling duty serving at local and district police stations, most usually first responders. Squad cars usually manned by two officers, apart from pistols usually with at least one select-fire gun stored in car's rear seats or trunk.
Public Order Units - perform specific tasks in the area of protecting people and property, special equipment and training, most often dispatched in large numbers (riot gear for crowd control, assault rifles for active shooter engagement, assisting criminal police, etc.). Squad minivans usually with seven heavily armed policemen.
Intervention Units - regional SWAT teams (8 teams covering 14 regions). Mainly for assisting criminal police with arresting dangerous offenders who have committed extremely serious crimes or to perform preliminary measures against terrorists, kidnappers or hijackers. They may be even assigned tasks related to the protection of buildings or the transport of dangerous substances, objects or valuables. Apart from cars equipped also with transport helicopters.
Rapid Response Units - these units reinforce the public order units on patrolling duty in selected areas of the country. Squad cars usually with two or three policemen armed with submachine guns.
Waterway Units - assigned duties at waterway stations established at major waterways. They control compliance with navigation rules and the Water Act, maintain public order on waterways and bodies of water, help rescue drowning people and clearing up after floods and other natural disasters.
Police Divers - assigned not only to waterway stations but also to intervention and rapid deployment units.
Railway Units - in train stations of major railway hubs, also operate in trains (catching thieves, looters)
Cynology Service - training of dogs and dog handlers, about 800 dogs are in active service with the Czech Police (K9 officers themselves are part of the above-mentioned units)
Hippology Service - training of horses and mounted policemen mainly for patrolling in natural reserve areas and for riot duty (mounted policemen themselves are part of the above-mentioned units)
Traffic Police Service - supervising the safety and flow of road traffic, dealing with traffic accidents and to check whether traffic rules are followed.
Forensic Laboratories and Expertise Service (OKTE)
Operative Documentation Division
Technical Security Division
Equipment
As of 2011, the Police of the Czech Republic employs about 41,000 officers, with a ratio of about 45 officers per 10,000 population.[7] Of these, about 3,500 are traffic-police officers.[8]
At
Slapy Reservoir in the Vltava river, the 15 years old police boat was replaced in 2015 with 2 new boats. In 2015, 16 new police boats (6× cabin boats
Tinnsilver 870-Cabin and 10× low-draft boats
Alunautic LC 7,50) were delivered, 5 of them to Central Bohemian Region (3 cabin boats and 2 low-draft boats). Other of the police boats were delivered to Orlík Reservoir on the Vltava, to Elbe in Nymburk, and other to South Bohemian Region, Hradec Králové Region and Pardubice Region.[15][16] River departments of police are in
Slapy Reservoir and
Prague on the
Vltava and in
Ústí nad Labem and
Nymburk on the
Elbe, other boats are used by local police departments on
Lipno Reservoir,
Orlík Reservoir,
Nové Mlýny Reservoir and others.[16]
The Prague river department of the police had in 2004 two cabin boats MB 075 produced in
GDR, and planned to replace their Russian
ZiL engines with Volvo Penta engines. Other watercraft was 5-meter ship Mayer with a Volvo Penta engine, 6-meter
SeeStar Patrol boat with Volvo Penta engine, 4-meter
Ryds 500 GTS boat, two rubber boats: 5-meter Bombard with Mercury 25 engine and 4-meter Quick Silver with Johnson 10 engine.[17] In Prague, also the Municipal Police has their watercraft.
Firearms
The following
firearms are used by the Police of the Czech Republic:
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abcNationwide units of Criminal Police and Investigation Service have local field offices in Brno, Ostrava, Olomouc (NCOZ only), České Budějovice, Plzeň, Ústí nad Labem and Hradec Králové