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Special Investigation Dept. building in Tokyo Public Prosecutors Offices building in Kanazawa Public Prosecutors Offices building in Nagasaki The District Public Prosecutors Offices ( 地方検察庁 , Chihō Kensatsu-chō , abbr. as 地検 Chiken ) are located in all the prefectural capitals (47) and 3 large cities in Hokkaido besides Sapporo.
Special Investigation Teams (SIT) (特殊事件捜査係, Tokushu Jiken Sousa Kakari) are tactical detective units of Japanese prefectural police forces. [1] Special Investigation Teams are maintained by prefectural police headquarters (PPH) and are trained to handle critical incidents including criminal investigation and tactical operations.
This is a list of intelligence agencies by country. It includes only currently operational institutions which are in the public domain. It includes only currently operational institutions which are in the public domain.
Japan: Special Investigation Department, Public Prosecutors Office Kazakhstan: Anti-Corruption Agency of the Republic of Kazakhstan Kenya: Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission Latvia: Corruption Prevention and Combating Bureau Liberia: Anti-Corruption Commission Lithuania: Special Investigation Service
All Prefectural Police Headquarters, except for the Hokkaidō Prefectural Police Department (due to the prefecture's large size) and the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department (due to the Tokyo's special status as the capital), are under the central coordination for operations monitoring and wide area investigation by the Regional Police Bureaus ...
The Public Security Intelligence Agency (公安調査庁, kōanchōsa-chō) is the domestic intelligence agency of Japan.It is administered by the Ministry of Justice and is tasked with internal security and espionage against threats to Japanese national security based on the Subversive Activities Prevention Act and the Act Regarding the Control of Organizations Which Committed Indiscriminate ...
Tokyo Metropolitan Police Headquarters in 1931. The TMPD was established by Japanese statesman Kawaji Toshiyoshi in 1874. Kawaji, who had helped establish the earlier rasotsu in 1871 following the disestablishment of the Edo period police system, was part of the Iwakura Mission to Europe, where he gathered information on Western policing; he was mostly inspired by the police of France ...
As a principal member of the Japanese intelligence community, the CIRO reports directly to the Prime Minister. Its operations are mandated through the Cabinet Law. [6] The agency is said to be equivalent to the American Central Intelligence Agency. [7] Like most intelligence agencies in Japan, its personnel are usually recruited from other ...