National Police Corps Cuerpo Nacional de Policía |
|||||||
Common name | Policía Nacional | ||||||
Abbreviation | CNP | ||||||
Logo of the National Police Corps. | |||||||
Badge of the National Police Corps. | |||||||
Motto | Ley y Orden | ||||||
Law and Order | |||||||
Agency overview | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Formed | March 13, 1986 | ||||||
Preceding agencies |
|
||||||
Legal personality | Governmental: Government agency | ||||||
Jurisdictional structure | |||||||
National agency (Operations jurisdiction) |
Spain | ||||||
Population | 46,661,950 | ||||||
Legal jurisdiction | As per operations jurisdiction. | ||||||
Governing body | Government of Spain | ||||||
Constituting instruments |
|
||||||
General nature | |||||||
Operational structure | |||||||
Overviewed by | Directorate-General of the Police and the Civil Guard | ||||||
Headquarters | Madrid, Spain | ||||||
Officers | 87.872 | ||||||
Minister responsible | Antonio Camacho Vizcaino, Minister of the Interior | ||||||
Agency executive | Francisco Javier Velázquez, Director-General | ||||||
|
|||||||
Website | |||||||
http://www.policia.es | |||||||
The National Police Corps (Spanish: Cuerpo Nacional de Policía, CNP; [ˈkwerpo naθjoˈnal de poliˈθi.a]) is the national civilian police force of Spain. The CNP is mainly responsible for policing urban areas, whilst countryside policing is generally the responsibility of the Guardia Civil, the Spanish gendarmerie. The CNP operates under the authority of Spain's Ministry of the Interior. They mostly handle criminal, judicial, terrorism and immigration matters. However, the CNP has limited competency in the Basque Country and Catalonia, where the autonomous Ertzaintza and Mossos d'Esquadra handle most matters except the most important ones like terrorism and organized crime.
Contents |
Duties are regulated by the Organic law 2/1986 of March 13, 1986.
Basic Scale:
Executive Scale:
The applicant can choose between a Basic Scale career or an Executive Scale career. Applicants must pass the following basic tests before starting the academy:
If the applicant has been chosen, they will receive professional training in Ávila's police academy for six months. Whilst trainees reside at the academy, they learn about Spanish law, receive firearms and self-defense training, conduct practical application exercises, learn the basics of the English language and undergo training in crime investigation. After that, the applicant will have the aula práctica, that mixes theoretical knowledge with practical situations for three months. Finally, the pupil will receive a policing practice, in which there will be various common situations that will form him as an agent.
Pay scale | Superior | Executive | Deputy Inspector | Basic | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Comisario Principal | Comisario | Inspector Jefe | Inspector | Subinspector | Oficial | Agente | |||||||||
English equivalent | Commissioner | Superintendent | Chief Inspector | Inspector | Deputy Inspector | Sergeant | Officer |
There are numerous specialist units:
An earlier uniform was brown, leading to the nickname la madera/los maderos ("the wood"/"the logs"). They are also called la pasma. Among supporters of the violent Basque terrorist organization ETA, Policía Nacional are colloquially referred to as txakurrak (Basque for "the dogs").
|
|