Satavian Federal Police

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Satavian Federal Police
Badge of the Satavian Federal Police
Badge of the Satavian Federal Police
AbbreviationSFP
Agency overview
Formed1986; 38 years ago (1986)
Preceding agencies
Employees8,033 (June 2017)
Annual budget€1.10 billion (2019-20)
Jurisdictional structure
Federal agencySatavia
Operations jurisdictionSatavia
Governing bodyGovernment of Satavia
Constituting instrument
General nature
Operational structure
HeadquartersDominion Building, Port Hope
Sworn members5,430 (June 2017)
Unsworn members2,603 (June 2017)
Minister responsible
Agency executive
  • Pieter Maurice, Commissioner
Services
11
  • 111 Emergency
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Border Investigations
  • Counter Terrorism
  • Diplomatic Protection
  • Organised Crime and Cyber
  • Crime Operations
  • Technology and Innovation
  • NCD Local Policing
  • Specialist Operations
  • Support Capability
Offices
9
  • Bloemstad Office
  • Burnaby Office
  • Hondeberg Office
  • Northport Office
  • Port Arthur Office
  • Port Hope District Command
  • Reutenberg Office
  • Talbot Office
  • Victoriaburg Office
Website
https://www.sfp.gov.sv

The Satavian Federal Police (SFP) is the principal federal law enforcement agency in Satavia, and is tasked with policing the National Capital District, investigating serious organised crime and protecting the country's national security. The SFP has supreme authority over most other federal and provincial agencies, including all seven provincial police forces.

The SFP is an independent police body and is supervised directly by the Satavian Government and is accountable to the Parliament of Satavia. The SFP focuses on anti-corruption in other law enforcement agencies, investigating and ending serious organised crime, cracking down on the use and trafficking of illegal narcotics and counter-extremism and terrorism operations. The SFP also serve as a supplement to provincial police forces if help is requested. The SFP has been criticised routinely for its perceived heavy-handed policing tactics.

History

The SFP was formed in 1986 as a merger of the Federation Police Constabulary, Anti-Corruption and Counter-Terrorism Service and the Federation Police Conduct & Standards Office, and was given sweeping powers under the Federal & Provincial Police Act 1986. It came into controversy less than a year after its formation after the death of 21-year-old Divan Roberts, who was fatally shot by an SFP officer. The SFP claimed Roberts had been resisting arrest, but eyewitness testimonies stated otherwise. A High Court hearing later that year found that the SFP high command had deliberately misled the investigation that was being conducted by the Hope Province Police Service, and lead to the resignation of several high ranking officers.

In 1993, despite negative press coverage and public opinion and the poor reputation of the agency, the Government expanded its responsibilities with the merger of the Federal Narcotics Taskforce with the SFP. After the transferal of Port Hope to the federal government, the SFP was given local policing responsibility for the city.

Oversight

The SFP is overseen by the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Law Enforcement and Police Ethics, which is made up of members from both the House of Representatives and Senate. It is accountable to the Parliament of Satavia and is independent of the Independent Policing Standards & Ethics Office (IPSEO).

As the SFP is charged with anti-corruption in the provincial police forces, the Satavian Military Police, a branch of the Satavian Army, is charged with investigating corruption in the SFP.

Organisation

The SFP is organised into six divisions, of which five operate on a federal basis and one - Port Hope Local Policing District - operate on a provincial level. Each division is lead by a Chief Superintendent[1].

Divisions

  • Counter-Terrorism and Serious Organised Crime Division
    • Chief Superintendent: Alice Keys
    • Chief Superintendent: Super Name
  • Narcotic Division
    • Chief Superintendent: Edward Deventer

Functions

111 Emergency

Anti-Corruption

Border Investigations

Counter-Terroism

Diplomatic Protection Unit

Organised Crime Prevention

Local policing

Insignia & Uniform

Satavian Federal Police ranks and insignia
Rank Commissioner Deputy Commissioner Assistant Commissioner Superintendent Detective Chief Inspector Detective Inspector Detective Sergeant Detective Constable Senior Constable Constable Recruit
Epaulette insignia Satavia Police OF-8.png New Zealand Police OF-7.svg Satavia Police OF-6.png Satavia Police OF-4b.png Satavia Police OF-4b.png New Zealand Police OF-2.svg Satavia Police OR-8.png New Zealand Police OR-6.svg New Zealand Police OR-3.svg New Zealand Police OR-1.svg New Zealand Police Recruit.svg
Military equivalent Lieutenant General Major General Brigadier Lieutenant Colonel Captain Warrant officer Sergeant Lance Corporal Private Cadet

Ranks in the Satavian Federal Police are largely based upon those of the provincial police forces, which in turn are primarily based upon police forces in Estmere. The highest rank is Commissioner, which has been held by Pieter Maurice since 2018.

SFP officers have similar uniforms to those of the Hope Province Police Service. Typical headdress for non-specialist officers is a type of slouch hat, although baseball caps are also commonplace. All officers are equipped with a stab or bullet-proof vest whilst on duty, and a high visibility jacket may be worn as well.

Commissioners

Since its inception in 1986, the force has had nine police commissioners. It is customary for commissioners to have served previously as a commissioner for a provincial police service or a federal agency. The current commissioner is Pieter Maurice, who has previously served as police commissioner for the New Borland Police.

Rank Name Term began Term ended Time in appointment Notes
Commissioner of the SFP
Commissioner Johan van de Witts 22 February 1986 5 December 1986 286 days Resigned following the death of Divan Roberts and subsequent High Court case
Commissioner Edward Mulberry-Bingham 5 December 1986 1 January 1990 3 years, 27 days
Commissioner Pieter Macleson 1 January 1990 23 January 1990 22 days Resigned following revelations of an extra-marital affair with a junior officer
Commissioner Andrew Reece 23 January 1990 8 October 2002 12 years, 258 days Died in office
Commissioner Daniel Warwick 8 October 2002 22 April 2007 4 years, 196 days Pressured to resign by government of Edward Norton over faliure to contain 2007 Satavian Riots
Commissioner Dawid-Jaques Pienaar 22 April 2007 3 September 2007 134 days Resigned following the end of the 2007 Satavian riots
Commissioner Ricky van de Merwe 3 September 2007 1 January 2014 6 years, 120 days
Commissioner Edwin Moltenberg 1 January 2014 1 January 2018 4 years, 0 days
Commissioner Pieter Maurice 1 January 2018 Incumbent 6 years, 358 days

Equipment

Communications

Officers communicate with each other using analogue two-way radios. A trial in 2019 aimed at the possibility of using Apple iPhones proved unsuccessful, even though Apple iPhones have been rolled out with other provincial police services.

Transport

Ariel Transport

The SPF has access to an Air Support Unit, Arend II, which is made up of helicopters that are stationed at air force bases across the country, and four that are stationed at Cape James International Airport.

Maritime Units

Whilst possessing no maritime units itself, the SFP has the power to commandeer any civilian-owned vessels and has full access to a provincial police service's maritime units.

Road Vehicles

Only three variants of a road vehicle are in use by the SFP as of 2021. These include the locally-made Barrett Commodore, which serves as the generic vehicle of choice and is used in local policing in Port Hope. The standard livery used on police vehicles is a Yellow/Blue Battenburg marking.

Class Image Type Notes
Patrol vehicles
Barrett Commodore Commodore VF Evoke.jpg PC Produced in Nuvania and Satavia, serves as generic road vehicle of choice, paticularly in local policing
Land Rover Exploration II 1999-2001 Land Rover Discovery II (New Zealand Police) 01.jpg PC Produced in Estmere and in the process of being replaced
WMW 5 Series NSW Police - Highway Patrol; BMW 530d (CLM221).jpg PC Produced in Werania, used primarily in high-speed pursuits and highway-patrol

Weaponry

All sworn members of the SFP carry firearms on their person, in contrast to the provincial police forces, who do not provide firearms to all officers. Officers routinely carry Tasers, pepper spray and truncheons. Firearms provided to officers are usually handguns, such as the Glock 22. Specialist units, such as Armed Response Units in Port Hope, Diplomatic Protection Units, Counter-Terrorism Command and officers serving with the Narcotic Taskforce are armed with automatic rifles, most commonly the SIG Sauer SIG516.

As all officers are armed, a higher percentage of arrests end in the deaths of both police officers and suspects than other provincial police forces. At least four people have been killed by negligent discharge of a firearm by SFP officers since 2010. Several others have been killed in accidental discharges, of which two were determined to be caused by lack of proper maintenance on the firearm.

Police & Civilian deaths

Police killed in the line of duty

Several SFP officers have been killed in the line of duty since the force's inception in 1986. The latest officer to be killed was Derek Du Plekker, aged 28, who was shot and killed whilst attending a burglary in progress in Crowe District, Port Hope.

Rank Name Age Date Circumstance Location
Constable Dawid Smuts 33 28 March 1987 Gunned down by members of the Vespasa Nine drug cartel during a drug bust operation Warwicksberg, Orange Province
Constable Edward Malan 27
Detective Inspector James Pienaar 49
Detective Constable Jacobus de Klerk 24 24 December 1989 Abducted and beaten to death with a cricket bat during a stakeout Port Hope, Hope Province
Constable William Mckinley 38 15 March 1992 Assaulted by a fleeing murder suspect, died of his injuries in hospital Konnigstad, National Capital District
Detective Inspector Nelson Smith 42 1 January 1995 Gunned down by Donald Merdoch during the New Year's Massacre Windstad, Orange Province
Constable Bernard Frey 24
Detective Sergeant Richard Wordsworth 32
Constable Alexander Willem Hayes 19
Detective Constable Edward Myers 26
Constable Jan Vertel 26 15 March 1999 Shot and killed during a routine traffic stop Port Hope, National Capital District
Detective Inspector James Malkirk 50 30 May 2004 Fatally shot during a counter-terrorism operation Northport, Orange Province
Traffic Officer Arthur Longman 19 12 November 2009 Held hostage whilst unarmed and later shot by both the hostage-taker and accidentally by Special Forces, died of injuries in hospital the same day Port Hope, National Capital District
Detective Sergeant Mark Rafte 38 8 January 2016 Stabbed fatally whilst guarding the entrance to Government House Port Hope, National Capital District
Constable Derek Du Plekker 28 27 September 2020 Shot and killed whilst attending burglary in progress Port Hope, National Capital District
   shaded rows denotes when officers were killed in the same incident.

Civilian deaths involving police

Since the force's inception in 1986, there have been 48 civilian deaths in SFP custody, of which 12 were determined to be suicides. 16 civilians were killed in incidents that were later found to be due to a breach of policing ethics, including the high profile death of Luke Chancellor in 2017, who was beaten to death by three officers whilst in police detention.

An additional 36 people have been shot and killed by SFP, five of whom were innocent bystanders, and eleven of whom were unarmed. The killing of Divan Roberts in 1986 was particularly controversial, as police claimed he had resisted arrest and had threatened to shoot the arresting officers. Eyewitnesses told the High Court that Roberts had been unarmed and had his hands up when he was shot nine times in the torso, arms and head. He died instantly. Since 1986, 173 people involved in police pursuits were killed, in addition to 158 sustaining serious injuries. A report published by the IPSEO in 2018 showed that a suspect was much more likely to be killed when dealing with the SFP than any other provincial police force or federal agency.

Controversies

On 13 September 1986, during an operation designed to reduce the high number of illegally owned firearms in the Orange Province, SFP officers stopped a car driven by 21-year old Divan Roberts. During the stop, Roberts, who did not posses a firearm, allegedly threatened to kill the officers, in adition to supposedly resisting arrest. Roberts, ethnically Bahian, was shot seven times as he was getting out of his vehicle. Roberts was pronounced dead at the scene. The SFP initially claimed that Roberts had threatened to kill the officers before resisting arrest, however eyewitness reports contradicted this. Some days after the shooting, the SFP unlawfully attempted to force the Orange Province Police Service to end its investigation, which the OPPS did. On 29 September, however, the High Court ordered the OPPS to reopen it's investigation into the death. The OPPS charged both SFP officers involved in the incident with murder, and on 3 December both officers (whose identities were withheld under the Protection of Identity, Vulnerables and Secrets Act, 1935). The High Court also ruled that the attempted coverup by the SFP was unlawful, and on December 5, SFP commissioner Johan van de Witts, in addition to a large proportion of the SFP's high command, resigned.

During the course of 1995, SFP officers were responsible for one quarter of all deaths in custody across Satavia, despite the SFP having no local policing jurisdiction at the time.

In a 2004 counter-terrorism operation in Northport, Orange Province, SFP agents killed all 14 suspects that they had hoped to question, in addition to two uninvolved bystanders. One SFP officer, DI James Malkirk, was killed during the operation. His death was attributed to the firefight that occured during the operation, although it has been suggested that he may have been killed by negligent discharge

See Also

  1. No distinction is made between a Chief Superintedent and a Superintendent in terms of seniority