Central Ministry of Internal Affairs. The metropolitan police are being cleared of General Yakunin’s team

The new chief police officer of Moscow, General Oleg Baranov, has started a personnel revolution: those close to him are leaving the headquarters former leader capital Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Anatoly Yakunin

For the last three weeks, since Oleg Baranov headed the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for Moscow, there have been resignations and appointments at the police headquarters. By all indications, new manager The State Administration is getting rid of the team of its former chief Anatoly Yakunin, who moved to the central apparatus of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Last Friday, the head of the New Moscow Internal Affairs Directorate, Colonel Sergei Ternovykh, was dismissed. He was also considered Yakunin's man. Life figured out where else in the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Moscow the people assigned to Yakunin’s team work, and who else might be affected by the resignation.

Even before the Day of Internal Affairs Officer, which is celebrated on November 10, a number of key appointments and resignations will take place in the leadership of the Moscow headquarters. Major General Oleg Baranov received from the leadership of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, or rather from Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev, carte blanche for personnel reform, a source in the central apparatus of the Ministry of Internal Affairs tells Life.

According to him, Baranov intends to get rid of the “legacy of the Varangians” who filled the capital’s police headquarters back in 2012, after the appointment of Anatoly Yakunin as its chief.

Then Petrovka 38, many professionals from the MUR, UBEiPK and heads of district departments left, the officer says. - The turnover in the State Administration actually continued until the latest events, when President Vladimir Putin dismissed Anatoly Yakunin on September 23, and appointed Oleg Baranov in his place.

The metropolitan police are now undergoing personnel purges. On October 14, the head of the TiNAO Internal Affairs Directorate, Colonel Sergei Ternovykh, was dismissed.

– The formal reason for the resignation was the results of an internal audit of the activities of the Internal Affairs Directorate after the incident at the Khovanskoye cemetery. At the end of the summer of 2016, a mass brawl took place there, in which two people died and dozens were injured, says a Life source at the capital’s headquarters of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. – After all, it was after the fight on Khovanskoye that Anatoly Yakunin sent the entire leadership of the Internal Affairs Directorate to retire, except for his protégé Sergei Ternovykh. Then the colonel got away with only disciplinary action. Yakunin worked with the Ternovs in the Internal Affairs Directorate of the Voronezh and Novgorod regions and was always more lenient towards the colonel than towards other subordinates.

When Colonel Ternov’s subordinates found out about the resignation, they hung a sign with the name of the now former leader on the wall near the men’s toilet at the Internal Affairs Directorate.

“An order has already been signed to appoint Colonel Boris Sheinkin, who worked as the chief of police of the South-Eastern Administrative District and is considered Baranov’s man, to the position of acting head of the TiNAO Internal Affairs Directorate,” a source in the capital’s police told Life.

In addition to Sergei Ternovykh, another protege of Anatoly Yakunin, deputy head of the MUR, Colonel Mikhail Gusakov, will lose his position in the coming weeks. The colonel is married to the niece of Anatoly Yakunin, who heads administrative department MUR.

According to Life, Gusakov went on vacation, after which he will most likely be transferred to the Operations Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. It is now headed by the former chief police officer of Moscow, Anatoly Yakunin. New personnel additions to the unit are expected soon.

“Another of his proteges is joining Yakunin from the capital police - the head of the press service of the main headquarters, Major Sofya Khotina, who worked in this position for about six months,” claims a Life source. - It happened like this: Yakunin brought the widow of his friend, the former head of police, to Moscow Voronezh region Oleg Khotin. And in 2016, after the resignation of Colonel Andrei Galiakberov as head of the press service of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for Moscow, he appointed Khotina to the vacant position. After his resignation, General Yakunin decided to transfer Sofya Khotina to work in the central office of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

Perhaps, following Sofia Khotina, Colonel Gennady Golikov, deputy chief of the Moscow police, will soon transfer to Anatoly Yakunin.

– Golikov was once the deputy chief of police of the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs for the Novgorod region, when he was led by Yakunin. During their joint service, he began to trust Golikov as himself. Most likely, the colonel can take the post of deputy chief of the Operations Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, who oversees the activities of the duty units of regional police departments - he already did this as deputy chief of the Moscow police, says Life’s interlocutor from the central office of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

In the middle of last week, Oleg Baranov made personnel changes in the headquarters itself, on Petrovka, 38. Thus, the head of the UEBiPK, Major General Sergei Solopov, was appointed to the post of chief of the Moscow police, deputy head of the headquarters.

“Oleg Baranov was the chief of police, so in his place he appointed a person whom he trusted and with whom he worked in the Department for Combating Organized Crime,” says Life’s interlocutor from the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation in Moscow.

And on October 6, 2016, the head of the MUR, Major General Igor Zinoviev, was appointed head of the Internal Affairs Directorate of the Eastern Administrative District of Moscow. His predecessor, Major General Sergei Plakhikh, went for a promotion to Kaluga, where he headed the regional Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

Perhaps, in the coming days, the MUR may be headed by Colonel Maxim Vanichkin, the son of Deputy Head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Mikhail Vanichkin. The current minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev and the head of the Main Directorate of Criminal Investigation (GUUR) of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Viktor Golovanov worked with the latter back in the 80s at the MUR.

For the last three years, Vanichkin Jr. has been working for Golovanov at the GUUR, so he asked Kolokoltsev to take a closer look at the young officer.

According to Life, the head of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for Moscow, Major General Baranov, plans to conduct a secret check of all 125 district departments and 10 district police departments of the city by the end of 2016 and clear them of people in whom he is not sure.

“Oleg Anatolyevich is a tactful, competent operative who will conduct an audit of his new “economy,” but will not do it publicly,” says an officer of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. “At the same time, he is a tough person, so if the auditors find serious violations in the work of the departments, then the bosses will face resignation.

According to the head of the independent trade union of the capital's police officers, Mikhail Pashkin, General Baranov knows the situation in the territorial departments well.

“Oleg Anatolyevich has been Yakunin’s deputy since 2012, therefore, it seems to me, he is well aware of the real state of affairs on earth,” Mikhail Pashkin told Life.

Life was unable to promptly obtain official comments about the reshuffles in the leadership of the capital's main headquarters of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation.

Nikolay Dobrolyubov

General of Police Russian Federation Vladimir Aleksandrovich Kolokoltsev was born on May 11, 1961 in the city of Nizhny Lomov, Penza region. He entered the service of the internal affairs bodies in 1982 in the police department for the protection of diplomatic missions of foreign states accredited in Moscow.

In 1984, he was appointed to the position of platoon commander of a separate PPSM battalion of the Internal Affairs Directorate of the Gagarin District Executive Committee of Moscow.

In 1985, he entered the full-time department of the Higher Political School named after the 60th anniversary of the Komsomol of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR at the faculty with a degree in Jurisprudence, which he graduated in 1989. Upon completion of his studies, he returned to serve in the Department of Internal Affairs as an investigator in the criminal investigation department of the Internal Affairs Directorate of the Kuntsevo District Executive Committee of the city. Moscow.

After this, he was appointed deputy chief of the 20th Moscow police department, then chief 8 police departments in Moscow.

In 1992, Vladimir Aleksandrovich was sent to the Criminal Investigation Department to the position of senior detective of the 2nd department of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Moscow Main Internal Affairs Directorate. At the beginning of 1993, he was appointed head of the 108th Moscow police department. After 2 years, he was confirmed as head of the criminal investigation department
2 District Department of Internal Affairs of the Central Administrative District of Moscow.

In 1997, he transferred to the service in the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia as the head of the 4th regional department of the RUOP for Moscow under the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. Two years later, he was appointed to the position of head of the regional operational-search bureau for the South-Eastern Administrative District of Moscow of the Central Regional Directorate for Combating Organized Crime under the Main Directorate for Combating Organized Crime of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia.

In 2001, he became the head of the 3rd department of the operational-search bureau of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the Central Federal District. Subsequently, he is appointed deputy head of the operational search bureau of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the Central Federal District.

In 2007, he was appointed head of the Department of Internal Affairs for the Oryol region. In April 2009, he became first deputy head of the Criminal Investigation Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia.

On September 7, 2009, by Decree of the President of the Russian Federation, Police Major General Vladimir Aleksandrovich Kolokoltsev was appointed head of the Main Department of Internal Affairs for Moscow.

June 10, 2010 By decree of the President of the Russian Federation, he was awarded the special rank of “Lieutenant General of Police”.

On March 24, 2011, after passing recertification, by Decree of the President of the Russian Federation, he was appointed to the position of head of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for Moscow with the special rank of “Lieutenant General of Police”.

On May 21, 2012, by decree of the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin, Police Lieutenant General Vladimir Aleksandrovich Kolokoltsev was appointed Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation.

On June 12, 2013, by Decree of the President of the Russian Federation No. 556, Vladimir Aleksandrovich Kolokoltsev was awarded the special rank of “Colonel General of Police.”

On November 10, 2015, by Decree of the President of the Russian Federation No. 554, Vladimir Aleksandrovich Kolokoltsev was awarded the special rank of “Police General of the Russian Federation”

May 18, 2018 By Presidential Decree Russian Federation No. 230 Vladimir Aleksandrovich Kolokoltsev was appointed Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation.

Kolokoltsev Vladimir Aleksandrovich is married and has a son and daughter. Doctor of Law. Honored employee of the Department of Internal Affairs. Has state and departmental awards.

Part of the system of internal affairs bodies of the Russian Federation. Subordinate to the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation. The main objectives of the department are to ensure the security, rights and freedoms of citizens, suppress and solve crimes, protect public order.

The Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the city of Moscow is headed by a chief, who is appointed and removed from office by the President of Russia on the recommendation of the Minister of Internal Affairs. Before presenting a candidacy to the President of Russia, the opinion of the mayor of Moscow is clarified. Control over the activities of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs is carried out by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, the mayor, the Moscow government and the Moscow City Duma.

Currently, the head of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs is Police Major General Oleg Baranov (appointed on September 22, 2016).

Story

From the moment of its foundation until his death in 1844, the chief of the gendarmes and the head of the III Division was Alexander Khristoforovich Benkendorf. The reform of 1880 turned the Ministry of Internal Affairs into the dominant element of the state apparatus, a role in which it remained almost until the fall of the autocracy. Due to the enormous workload of the minister in managing subordinate institutions, the functions of managing the security police were performed by his deputy - comrade of the minister, head of the police and commander of the Separate Corps of Gendarmes. He was directly in charge of the Police Department.

The need to create special bodies dealing exclusively with criminal investigation was realized in Russia by the beginning of the 20th century. In July 1908, a law was passed on the organization of the detective unit, according to which detective departments were created in city and county police departments. Their task included conducting inquiries in criminal cases with the necessary operational investigative measures. 
 At the beginning of the 20th century, the Russian criminal investigation department was recognized as one of the best in the world, as it used the latest techniques in its practice. For example, a registration system based on systematizing information about individuals into 30 special categories. Albums of photographs of violators were actively used (the first Russian photography cabinet was organized back in 1889). At a time when in the West the methods of photography and fingerprinting were just being mastered by intelligence services, the Russian police already had at their disposal more than 2 million photographs and 3 million fingerprint cards. Moreover, the system of centralized circular search for criminals introduced in the criminal investigation Russian Empire by January 1, 1915, was borrowed first by Scotland Yard and then received general recognition.

Second operational police regiment of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for Moscow

2nd operational police regiment of the Moscow Main Internal Affairs Directorate (2nd OPP) - formed in 2004 by the merger of three operational regiments of the Moscow police, which at one time were parts of the city patrol (PG) - the basis of service 02.

The activities of the 2nd OPP are aimed at ensuring the protection of public order during mass events in Moscow. Also, employees of the 2nd OPP are used to provide force support to various criminal police units.

The unit reports directly to the leadership of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Department of Operational Operations of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for Moscow - the Department for the Protection of Public Order.

It is the second largest unit in the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for Moscow after the Moscow OMON.

Zonal Canine Service Center

The Zonal Canine Service Center is the largest center for training dogs and employees for work. Dogs are trained according to different directions: search for drugs, explosives, search firearms and for detention. The dogs are kept in enclosures separated by areas of work. Weapon detection dogs live separately from detention dogs. Breeds such as German Shepherd, Labrador, and others are used. On the territory of the center there is a veterinary unit, a training area for detention, a training area for searching for explosives, a “maternity hospital” and “ kindergarten”, as well as a “nursing home” for retired dogs. One dog handler works with one dog. They work together all their lives.

Management

The position of Chief of Police was introduced in, reporting to the Governor General. He supervised the activities of police chiefs, was responsible for peace and order in the city, headed the fire department, supervised trade, urban improvement and the sanitary condition of Moscow, monitored compliance with laws and regulations of higher and central institutions, and the implementation of decisions of judicial authorities. The position was abolished in connection with the establishment of a city government in Moscow.

Moscow chief police chiefs

Full name Title, rank, rank Time to fill a position
Grekov Maxim Timofeevich colonel, brigadier 11.04.1722-23.12.1728
Pozdnyakov Ivan Davidovich state councilor 03.11.1729-1731
Grekov Stepan Timofeevich brigadier, police chief general 17.02.1731-22.12.1732
Obolduev Nikita Andreevich Colonel 11.01.1733-1739
Golokhvastov Ivan Martynovich state councilor 1749-1753
Divov Ivan Ivanovich 09.01.1762-1762
Yushkov Ivan Ivanovich Privy Councilor, Chief of Police 10.1762-17.04.1764
Arsenyev Taras Ivanovich Colonel, State Councilor 17.04.1764-10.02.1765
Tolstoy Vasily Ivanovich count, brigadier, state councilor 1765-1770
Bakhmetev Nikolai Ivanovich foreman 1770-1771
Arkharov Nikolai Petrovich colonel (major general) 1771-01.01.1781
Ostrovsky Boris Petrovich foreman 1781-1785
Tol Fedor Nikolaevich colonel (major general) 1785-1790
Glazov Pavel Mikhailovich colonel, brigadier 1790-02.09.1793
Kozlov Pavel Mikhailovich brigadier, major general 22.10.1793-1796
Kaverin Pavel Nikitovich State Councilor (actual State Councilor) 31.03.1797-09.12.1798
Ertel Fyodor Fyodorovich major general 09.12.1798-12.03.1801
Kaverin Pavel Nikitovich actual state councilor, major general 12.03.1801-13.12.1802
Spiridov Grigory Grigorievich brigadier, actual state councilor 13.12.1802-20.12.1804
Balashov Alexander Dmitrievich major general 20.12.1804-24.11.1807
Gladkov Ivan Vasilievich major general 29.11.1807-17.04.1809
Ivashkin Pyotr Alekseevich major general 17.04.1809-08.03.1816
Shulgin Alexander Sergeevich major general 08.03.1816-02.08.1825
Shulgin Dmitry Ivanovich major general 02.08.1825-06.04.1830
Mukhanov Sergey Nikolaevich colonel, aide-de-camp 06.04.1830-27.09.1833
Tsynsky Lev Mikhailovich major general 29.11.1833-01.02.1845
Luzhin Ivan Dmitrievich Colonel, His Majesty's Retinue Major General, Adjutant Wing 13.12.1845-12.05.1854
Timashev-Bering Alexey Alexandrovich major general 12.05.1854-31.12.1857
Kropotkin Alexey Ivanovich prince, guard colonel, major general, aide-de-camp 01.01.1858-12.11.1860
Potapov Alexander Lvovich His Majesty's Retinue Major General 12.11.1860-15.12.1861
Kreutz Heinrich Kiprianovich Count, His Majesty's Retinue Major General (Lieutenant General) 16.12.1861-03.01.1866
Arapov Nikolai Ustinovich 03.01.1866-14.10.1878
His Majesty's Retinue Major General 14.10.1878-13.08.1881
Yankovsky Evgeniy Osipovich major general 13.08.1881-18.07.1882
Kozlov Alexander Alexandrovich His Majesty's Retinue Major General, Lieutenant General 26.07.1882-11.01.1887
Yurkovsky Evgeniy Kornshyuvich major general 11.01.1887-27.12.1891
Vlasovsky Alexander Alexandrovich acting colonel 28.12.1891-18.07.1896
Trepov Dmitry Fedorovich colonel, major general 12.09.1896-01.01.1905

Chiefs of the Moscow police - police

Heads of the Main Department of Internal Affairs of the Moscow City Executive Committee

  • Kozlov Andrey Petrovich (1969 - 1973)
  • Samokhvalov Vadim Grigorievich (1973 - September 1979)
  • Trushin Vasily Petrovich (1979 - January 1984)
  • Borisenkov Vladimir Grigorievich (1984 - August 1986)
  • Bogdanov Peter Stepanovich (1986 - April 1991)
  • Myrikov Nikolay Stepanovich (April - September 1991)

Heads of the Moscow City Internal Affairs Directorate

  • Murashev Arkady Nikolaevich (September 1991 - November 9, 1992)
  • Pankratov Vladimir Iosifovich (1992 - March 2, 1995)
  • Kulikov Nikolay Vasilievich (1995 - December 4, 1999)
  • Shvidkin Viktor Andreevich (1999 - 2001, acting chief)
  • Pronin Vladimir Vasilievich (July 24, 2001 - April 28, 2009)

Heads of the Central Internal Affairs Directorate for Moscow

(renamed in Q4 2006)

  • Ivanov Alexander Kuzmich (May 4, 2009 - September 7, 2009, acting chief)
  • (September 7, 2009 - March 24, 2011).

Heads of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for Moscow

  • Kolokoltsev Vladimir Alexandrovich (March 24, 2011 - May 21, 2012);
  • Viktor Vladimirovich Golovanov (from May 21 to June 2, 2012, acting chief);
  • Yakunin Anatoly Ivanovich (June 2, 2012 - September 22, 2016);

Territorial body executive branch in Moscow, part of the system of internal affairs bodies of the Russian Federation. Reports to the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation. The main tasks of the department are to ensure the security, rights and freedoms of citizens, suppress and solve crimes, and protect public order.

Andres rus, GNU 1.2

The Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the city of Moscow is headed by a chief, who is appointed and removed from office by the President of Russia on the recommendation of the Minister of Internal Affairs. Before submitting a candidacy to the President of Russia, the opinion of the Moscow mayor is clarified. Control over the activities of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs is carried out by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, the mayor, the Moscow government and the Moscow City Duma.

Story

October 28, 1917, by order of the Council People's Commissars The NKVD of the RSFSR issued a decree “On the Workers' Militia,” according to which all Soviets of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies establish a workers' militia. The workers' militia was transferred to the jurisdiction of the Council of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies.

The Office of the Workers' and Peasants' Militia was created in the city of Moscow.

In 1946, a law was passed transforming the Council of People's Commissars into the Council of Ministers, in connection with which the People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs was reorganized into the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and the city committee of the NKVD was reorganized into the Department of Internal Affairs.

In 1973, the Department of Internal Affairs of the Moscow City Executive Committee was transformed into the Main Department of Internal Affairs, and the district departments were transformed into departments of internal affairs.

In 2011, the unit was renamed into the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for Moscow.

Structure

Department of Public Order

In the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for Moscow, the following stages of the formation of the Department (service) for the protection of public order can be distinguished:

  1. 1917 (November 10) - 1924 - A group of service inspectors under the head of the OUMS of Moscow.
  2. 1925 - 1933 - Group of inspectors of combat training and OUMS service in Moscow.
  3. 1933 - 1940 - Subdivision of combat training inspectors and OUMS service in Moscow.
  4. 1940 - 1946 - Department of external police service.
  5. 1946 - 1952 - Department of external police service.
  6. 1953 - 1955 - Police Department.
  7. 1956 - 1957 - Department of external police service.
  8. 1957 - 1970 - Police Administrative Service Department.
  9. 1970 - 1977 - Police Service Department.
  10. 1977 - 1997 - Department of Public Order Protection.
  11. 2011 to the present - Department for the Protection of Public Order of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for Moscow.

UPOP goals:

  • organization of patrol patrol services,
  • organization of security during cultural and socio-political events,
  • organization of security during sporting events,
  • execution of administrative legislation,
  • organization of escort service.

The head of the department is Major General of Police Vyacheslav Alekseevich Kozlov.


unknown, Public Domain

Criminal Investigation Department

In the Moscow Criminal Investigation Department he serves about four thousand people, which is 5% of the number of metropolitan police personnel.

They account for almost 2/3 of solved murders, half of solved rapes, robberies, crimes committed with the use of firearms and explosive devices, every third solved theft and robbery.

Subordinate formations

Riot police

On October 23, 1979, on the basis of the 2nd regiment of the patrol service, by order of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs, a special-purpose police detachment was created. The main tasks are to ensure safety during various events, saving people’s lives in emergencies, disasters, epidemiological exacerbations, etc.

1st Operational Police Regiment (mounted police and tourist police)

The main task of the mounted police is to patrol parks, prevent crime, and maintain order at public events. The Moscow Mounted Police has about 1,000 people and 255 horses.

Mounted police in the Alexander Garden Vladimir Shelyapin, CC BY-SA 3.0

Horses are transported to the duty station in Ford F350 Super Duty series pickups. 6 horses are placed in such a trailer.

The main task of the tourist police is patrolling tourist routes in the central part of the city, and in addition to the main responsibilities related to the prevention and suppression of crime, employees of this unit help and advise on issues of an official nature - foreign citizens, since the main difference between a tourist policeman is his knowledge of any foreign language on a conversational level.

The tourist police are considered the most elite unit both in Moscow and throughout Russia.

The tourist police staff is 180 people.

The first operational police regiment of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia in Moscow is located at the Airport metro station, Viktorenko street, 10

Second operational police regiment of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for Moscow

2nd operational police regiment of the Moscow Main Internal Affairs Directorate (2nd OPP) - formed in 2004 by the merger of three operational regiments of the Moscow police, which at one time were parts of the city patrol (PG) - the basis of service 02.


Vitaly Kuzmin, GNU 1.2

The activities of the 2nd OPP are aimed at ensuring the protection of public order during mass events in Moscow. Also, employees of the 2nd OPP are used to provide force support to various criminal police units.

The unit reports directly to the leadership of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Department of Operational Operations of the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for Moscow - the Department for the Protection of Public Order.

It is the second largest unit in the Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for Moscow after the Moscow OMON.

Zonal Canine Service Center

The Zonal Canine Service Center is the largest center for training dogs and employees for work. Dogs are trained in various areas: searching for drugs, explosives, searching for firearms, and for arresting. The dogs are kept in enclosures separated by areas of work. Weapon detection dogs live separately from detention dogs. Breeds such as German Shepherd, Labrador, and others are used. On the territory of the center there is a veterinary unit, a detention training area, an explosives detection training area, a “maternity hospital” and a “kindergarten”, as well as a “nursing home” for retired dogs. One dog handler works with one dog. They work together all their lives.

Management

The position of Chief of Police was introduced in 1722, and from 1727 he was subordinate to the Governor General.

He supervised the activities of police chiefs, was responsible for peace and order in the city, headed the fire department, supervised trade, urban improvement and the sanitary condition of Moscow, monitored compliance with laws and regulations of higher and central institutions, and the implementation of decisions of judicial authorities.

The position was abolished in 1905 due to the establishment of a city government in Moscow.

Moscow chief police chiefs

Full nameTitle, rank, rankTime to fill a position
Grekov Maxim Timofeevichcolonel, brigadier11.04.1722-23.12.1728
Pozdnyakov Ivan Davidovichstate councilor 03.11.1729-1731
Grekov Stepan Timofeevichbrigadier, police chief general 17.02.1731-22.12.1732
Obolduev Nikita AndreevichColonel 11.01.1733-1739
Golokhvastov Ivan Martynovichstate councilor 1749-1753
Divov Ivan Ivanovich 09.01.1762-1762
Yushkov Ivan IvanovichPrivy Councilor, Chief of Police 10.1762-17.04.1764
Arsenyev Taras IvanovichColonel, State Councilor 17.04.1764-10.02.1765
Tolstoy Vasily Ivanovichcount, brigadier, state councilor 1765-1770
Bakhmetev Nikolay Ivanovichforeman 1770-1771
Arkharov Nikolay Petrovichcolonel (major general) 1771-01.01.1781
Ostrovsky Boris Petrovichforeman 1781-1785
Tol Fedor Nikolaevichcolonel (major general) 1785-1790
Glazov Pavel Mikhailovichcolonel, brigadier 1790-02.09.1793
Kozlov Pavel Mikhailovichbrigadier, major general 22.10.1793-1796
Kaverin Pavel NikitovichState Councilor (actual State Councilor) 31.03.1797-09.12.1798
Ertel Fedor Fedorovichmajor general 09.12.1798-12.03.1801
Kaverin Pavel Nikitovichactual state councilor, major general 12.03.1801-13.12.1802
Spiridov Grigory Grigorievichbrigadier, actual state councilor 13.12.1802-20.12.1804
Balashov Alexander Dmitrievichmajor general 20.12.1804-24.11.1807
Gladkov Ivan Vasilievichmajor general 29.11.1807-17.04.1809
Ivashkin Pyotr Alekseevichmajor general 17.04.1809-08.03.1816
Shulgin Alexander Sergeevichmajor general 08.03.1816-02.08.1825
Shulgin Dmitry Ivanovichmajor general 02.08.1825-06.04.1830
Mukhanov Sergey Nikolaevichcolonel, aide-de-camp 06.04.1830-27.09.1833
Tsynsky Lev Mikhailovichmajor general 29.11.1833-01.02.1845
Luzhin Ivan DmitrievichColonel, His Majesty's Retinue Major General, Adjutant Wing 13.12.1845-12.05.1854
Timashev-Bering Alexey Alexandrovichmajor general 12.05.1854-31.12.1857
Kropotkin Alexey Ivanovichprince, guard colonel, major general, aide-de-camp 01.01.1858-12.11.1860
Potapov Alexander LvovichHis Majesty's Retinue Major General 12.11.1860-15.12.1861
Kreutz Heinrich KipriyanovichCount, His Majesty's Retinue Major General (Lieutenant General) 16.12.1861-03.01.1866
Arapov Nikolay Ustinovich 03.01.1866-14.10.1878
His Majesty's Retinue Major General 14.10.1878-13.08.1881
Yankovsky Evgeniy Osipovichmajor general 13.08.1881-18.07.1882
Kozlov Alexander AlexandrovichHis Majesty's Retinue Major General, Lieutenant General 26.07.1882-11.01.1887
Yurkovsky Evgeniy Kornshyuvichmajor general 11.01.1887-27.12.1891
Vlasovsky Alexander Alexandrovichacting colonel 28.12.1891-18.07.1896
Trepov Dmitry Fedorovichcolonel, major general 12.09.1896-01.01.1905


Main Department of Internal Affairs of Moscow

Petrovka, 38. City Department of Internal Affairs building

Main Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia for the city of Moscow- an executive authority of Moscow, part of the system of internal affairs bodies of the Russian Federation. Reports to the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs. The main tasks of the department are to ensure the security, rights and freedoms of citizens, suppress and solve crimes, and protect public order.

The Main Department of Internal Affairs for the city of Moscow is headed by a chief, who is appointed and removed from office by the President of Russia on the recommendation of the Minister of Internal Affairs. Before submitting a candidacy to the President of Russia, the opinion of the Mayor of Moscow is clarified. Currently, the head of the Central Internal Affairs Directorate is Police Lieutenant General Vladimir Aleksandrovich Kolokoltsev (appointed on September 7, 2009 instead of Vladimir Pronin).

Control over the activities of the Central Internal Affairs Directorate is exercised by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, the mayor, the Moscow government and the Moscow City Duma.

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