Law enforcement in Switzerland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Toyota Avensis of the airport section of the Cantonal police of Geneva
Toyota Avensis of the airport section of the Cantonal police of Geneva
Toyota Land Cruiser of the Cantonal police of Geneva
Toyota Land Cruiser of the Cantonal police of Geneva

Law enforcement in Switzerland is carried out on federal, cantonal and municipal levels.

Contents

[edit] Law enforcement agencies

[edit] Federal

[edit] Cantonal

[edit] Municipal

The cantonal police forces act independently and are not subject to the Federal Police. The cantonal governments define the responsibilities of separate municipal forces where they exist. The Federal Police does not have uniformed officers. It is responsible for relations between cantonal police forces, and between Swiss and foreign police forces, as well as for organised crime, money laundering and crimes involving explosives.

There is also the Border Guard Corps which is a federal division that operates both customs and border checks. With Switzerland due to join the Schengen agreement in November 2008 the Border Guard Corps will still be present on all borders to do systematic customs checks and random passport checks.

[edit] Vehicles

Typical police cars in Switzerland are BMW coupés and sedans. Other vehicles by Mercedes, Opel or Volvo, are often used. Minibuses in German-speaking Switzerland are usually the Volkswagen T4 or T5. In the French-speaking cantons, increased usage of vehicles from French automobile manufacturers Peugeot and Renault as well as Toyota.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

This law enforcement-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Languages