Republican Police Corps


The Republican Police Corps was a police force of the Italian Social Republic during the Italian Civil War.

History

The Republican Police Corps was established in December 1944 as part of the Italian Armed Forces, within the territory controlled by the Italian Social Republic. The force was established in order to carry out law enforcement and public security duties alongside the National Republican Guard. The new Corps, under Lieutenant-General Renato Ricci, included the Fascist Blackshirts, the Italian Africa Police members serving in Rome and the Carabinieri. The Corps would be the entity that would work against anti-Fascist groups and would be autonomous according to an order issued by Mussolini on 19 November 1944.
The Police Corps inherited civilian officials both from the Directorate General of Public Security and from the former Public Security Agents Corps. The organization of the police force in the Fascist-led Republic anticipated that of the Italian State Police established in 1981. The Republican Police Corps was a single government agency, which set it apart from the previous organization. Previously, the police consisted of civilian police officials and military-organized agents.
At the end of the war, the Republican Police Corps was reabsorbed into the Directorate General of Public Security. The police activities were not carried uniformly: there were German interferences and power abuses made by political authorities.

Organization

The Republican Police Corps numbered about 20 000, deployed mostly in provincial capital cities; they were framed into 10 Regional Inspectorates and 66 Questure, 2 Speciality schools in Padua, escort teams detached at the Ministries, including the "Public Security Presidential Squad" tasked with Benito Mussolini's personal security. There were also operational mobile units, in order to carry out counter-guerrilla warfare and territorial control duties.
The counter-guerrilla units, belonging to police forces, were:
Each Questura had a company-sized public order duty; also the Regional Inspectorates had analogous units. Alongside the regular police forces, did exist some "special police units", including ill-famed "Banda Koch" active in Rome, "Banda Carità" active in Florence and Padua, and other so-called "Repression bands". Most of these band members were heavy sentenced or extra-judicially killed in the immediate aftermaths of World War II.

Chiefs of the Republican Police Corps