Municipal police (Spain)

In Spanish towns and cities, the Policia Municipal (Municipal Police), also known as the Policia Local or Guardia Urbana, is a police force organized at the municipal level.[1] From 2010 to 2015 Spain has between 61,867 and 66,400 local police officers distributed among all the Autonomous Communities.[2]

Hyundai i40 of the Policía Municipal de Madrid
Guàrdia Urbana Barcelona police officer.
Police station of the Policia Local in Valencia

Municipal police are authorized in every town and city of 5,000 or more people. The Policía Municipal de Madrid is the largest force and the Guàrdia Urbana de Barcelona is the second largest. In towns and villages that are too small to organize a municipal force, the function is performed by the Guardia Civil or by the Autonomous Community force. They are in some villages assisted by uniformed municipal employees with limited law enforcement authority called Vigilantes Municipales, Although their powers are in most cases quite limited. The local police services of individual towns and cities supplement the work of the National Police Corps, dealing with such matters as traffic, parking, monitoring public demonstrations, guarding municipal buildings, and enforcing local ordinances. They also collaborate with the National Police Corps by providing personnel to assist in crowd control.

Numbering about 37,000 individuals in 1986, municipal police officers are generally trained only with pistols and in a few smaller municipalities the local police do not routinely carry weapons whilst on normal duty. This is often the case where another, larger police force has a local station or barracks.[3]

Local Police in Spain

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In Spain there are the following Local Police bodies, whose names depending on the institutional tradition of each place:

 
Madrid Municipal Police Toyota Land Cruiser in the newest livery
 
Barcelona Urban Guard SEAT Altea.

And other municipalities where it has been created. According to the provisions of Royal Legislative Decree 781/1986, of April 18, which approves the Consolidated Text of the current legal provisions regarding Local Regime, fourth transitional provision, "The Local Police will only exist in municipalities with population greater than 5,000 inhabitants, unless the Ministry of Territorial Administration authorizes its creation in those with a lower census."


See also

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References

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  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Country Studies. Federal Research Division.

  1. ^ Newton, M.T. (1997), Institutions of Modern Spain, Cambridge University Press, p. 149
  2. ^ "Mapa de la policía en España por comunidades autónomas". 17 January 2015.
  3. ^ http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field%28DOCID+es0178%29 [dead link]