Central Operative Unit

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Central Operative Unit
Unidad Central Operativa  (Spanish)
Coat of Arms of the Guardia Civil Central Operative Unit.svg
Emblem of the UCO
Active1987-present
CountrySpain
AgencyCivil Guard
AbbreviationUCO
Structure
Agents550[1]

The Central Operative Unit (UCO) (Spanish: Unidad Central Operativa) is a specialized division of the Civil Guard of Spain responsible for the investigation and prosecution of the most serious forms of crime and organized crime, whether national or international, as well as support to the Territorial Units of Judicial Police, that, due to lack of personnel or resources, or because the criminal field is more than one autonomous communities, require the support of this Unit.

Functions[]

The main crimes that the UCO investigates are:[2]

Also, the UCO has the duty to realize investigations ordered by a judge, a court or a prosecutor.

Structure[]

  • Commander of the Unit (a Civil Guard Colonel).
    • Department of Technical and Operational Support.
    • Department of Criminal Investigation specialized in General Delinquency.
    • Department of Criminal Investigation specialized in Economic and Technological Delinquency.
    • Department of Criminal Investigation specialized in Drug Trafficking and Smuggling.
    • Unit attached to the Anti-Drug Special Attorney's Office.
    • Unit attached to the Anti-Corruption Special Attorney's Office.
    • Teams Against Organized Crime (ECO), six teams through the country.

Important cases[]

  • February 27, 1994. Release of Maria Àngels Feliu after 492 days kidnapped.
  • July 23, 2007. Arrest of Jaime Giménez Arbe (known as "The Loner") in Figueira da Foz, Portugal.
  • October 27, 2009. The dismantling of a corruption plot in the metropolitan area of Barcelona, in the so-called "Pretoria Case", in which the mayor of Santa Coloma de Gramanet and other former public officials were arrested.
  • October 27, 2014. The dismantling of a corruption plot called "Púnica Case".[3]
  • July 18, 2017. The dismantling of a corruption plot in the Royal Spanish Football Federation.[4]

See also[]

References[]

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