Buenos Aires Provincial Police Policía de la Provincia de Buenos Aires |
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Patch of the Buenos Aires Provincial Police
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Agency overview | |
Formed | 1880 |
Employees | 57,000 |
Legal personality | Governmental: Government agency |
Jurisdictional structure | |
General nature | |
Operational structure | |
Elected officer responsible | Alejandro Granados, Ministry of Security |
Agency executive | Comisiario Gral. Hugo Matzkin , Chief of Police |
Website | |
Police at Ministry of Justice website |
The Buenos Aires Provincial Police (Spanish: Policía de la Provincia de Buenos Aires, informally Policía Bonaerense) is the police service responsible for policing the Province of Buenos Aires, in Argentina.
It is one of the biggest police services of Argentina, responsible for policing a province of over 15 million inhabitants, about 38% of Argentina's entire population. The Federal Capital district of Buenos Aires city is under the separate jurisdiction of the Argentine Federal Police and the Buenos Aires Metropolitan Police.
The institution is usually referred to as Policía Bonaerense, where bonaerense is the demonym for the Province of Buenos Aires. This contrasts with porteño, used for the inhabitants of the Buenos Aires city.
This police force is subordinate to the Provincial Ministry of Security headed by Minister Carlos Stornelli. The Chief of the force, Comisario General Hugo Matzkin has the title of Superintendente General de Policia, which translates as Superintendent General of Police.
Until January 2005, the Buenos Aires Police used the same rank system as employed by the Federal Police and other Argentine provincial police forces. This system consisted of seventeen ranks, of which nine were for (commissioned) officers and eight were for sub-officers (including the basic rank of agent). A new and simplified rank system was established through passage of a law governing police personnel.
This system officially abolished the distinction between (commissioned) officers and sub-officers. It instituted a rank system consisting of the following nine ranks, listed in descending order:
As of 2009, a new law modified the police ranks and established some variations (Ley 13.982/09). It establishes different personnel rankings ("Escalafones" as they are called in Spanish), which relate to operational responsibilities:
The current levels for the Command sub-ranking are (ten levels) in descending order: