Internal affairs (law enforcement)
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The internal affairs (United States terminology) division of a law enforcement agency investigates incidents and plausible suspicions of lawbreaking and professional misconduct attributed to officers on the force. In different systems, internal affairs can go by another name such as "professional standards," "inspectorate general", Office of Professional Responsibility or similar.
Several police departments in the USA have instituted civilian review or investigation of police misconduct complaints in response to community perception that internal affairs investigations are biased in favor of police officers. For example, San Francisco, California, has its Office of Citizen Complaints, created by voter initiative in 1983, in which civilians who have never been members of the San Francisco Police Department investigate complaints of police misconduct filed against members of the San Francisco Police Department.
Due to the sensitive nature of this responsibility, in many departments officers working internal affairs are not in a detective command, but report directly to the agency's chief, or to a board of civilian police commissioners.
Internal Affairs investigators are bound by stringent rules when conducting their investigations. In California, the Peace Officers Bill of Rights (POBR) is a mandated set of rules found in the Government Code.
In some places in the United States, internal affairs is derisively referred to as "the rat squad"; this nickname is used on the shows NYPD Blue and Law & Order.
Fictional representations
- Channel 4 in the United Kingdom airs a television series called 'ghost squad' regarding the undercover investigation of police corruption.
- In some French police movies (notably Les Ripoux), internal affairs (inspectorate general of the services or inspectorate general of the national police) are known as the bÅ“ufs-carottes, a kind of stew — because of their reputation for letting suspected policemen simmer until they have proofs to bring out a case.
- In the American film series Lethal Weapon, Internal Affairs is nicknamed InFernal Affairs and considered "the cops of the cops". However, the main Internal Affairs officer and the protagonist of the series eventually fall in love with each other.
See also
- Inspection technique de la gendarmerie nationale (France)
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