Federal Police of Brazil Polícia Federal |
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Common name | Federal Police |
Abbreviation | PF |
Polícia Federal emblem
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Agency overview | |
Formed | March 28, 1944 |
Legal personality | Governmental: Government agency |
Jurisdictional structure | |
Federal agency | Brazil |
General nature | |
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | Setor de Autarquias Sul, Quadra 6, Brasília, Distrito Federal, Brazil |
Agency executive | Leandro Daiello Coimbra, Director General |
Parent agency | Ministry of Justice |
Units |
15
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Website | |
http://www.pf.gov.br |
The Federal Police of Brazil, (Portuguese: Polícia Federal), is the federal law enforcement agency of Brazil and one of its three federal police forces. The other two are the Federal Highway Police and the Federal Railroad/Railway Police. From 1944 to 1967 it was called the Federal Department for Public Security (Portuguese: Departamento Federal de Segurança Pública).
The Federal Police Department is responsible for crimes against federal institutions, international drug trafficking, terrorism, cyber-crime, organized crime, public corruption, white-collar crime, money laundering, immigration, border control, airport security and maritime policing. It is subordinate to the Ministry of Justice.
The Federal Police's mandate was established on the 1st paragraph of Article 144 of the Brazilian Constitution, which assigns it the following roles:
Other federal statutes give the Federal Police the authority and responsibility to:
In March 1944, the former capital of the Republic, Rio de Janeiro, the police of the Federal District was transformed into the Federal Department of Public Safety ("Departamento Federal de Segurança Pública", in Portuguese language, or simply DFSP). The idea was create a police with jurisdiction in the whole country (not only in its original State). Despite its name change, initially the DFSP only served in the Federal District, but acted at the national level at the maritime police.