Interpol
21 November 2008



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INTERPOL headquarters to deploy team to ensure compliance with INTERPOL rules and regulations by Mexican law enforcement officials

19 November 2008

During recent months Mexico’s Attorney General's office has requested a series of arrests be made as part of Operation ‘Limpieza’, its ongoing investigation into information leaks by law enforcement to drug cartels.

The INTERPOL General Secretariat headquarters in Lyon, France has learned that on Tuesday 18 November, the Mexican Attorney General issued a statement that Ricardo Gutierrez Vargas, the Director for International Police Affairs at Mexico’s Federal Investigative Agency was subject to a ‘40-day provisional arrest’.

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INTERPOL Fugitives Conference focuses on international co-operation via global police tools

18 November 2008

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - INTERPOL’s 5th International Conference on Fugitives opened today with more than 170 law enforcement delegates from 70 countries hearing that global co-operation through technological innovation is key to achieving success in fugitive investigations.

Increased use of INTERPOL’s tools is vital, such as expansion of access to the Organization's global police communications system, known as I-24/7, and providing border control officers with access to INTERPOL’s databases on wanted persons. The three-day conference, from 18 to 20 November, will also discuss the use of social networking sites and the Internet in general in identifying and locating wanted persons.

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INTERPOL's six priority crime areas
Drugs and criminal organizations
Tackling the growing problem of drug abuse and trafficking, often linked to other crimes.
Financial and High-tech Crime
Combating counterfeiting, payment card fraud, intellectual property and cyber-crime.
Fugitives
Tracing fugitives, who threaten public safety and undermine criminal justice systems.
Public safety and terrorism
Countering terrorism, which threatens public safety and world security.
Trafficking in human beings
Fighting abuse and exploitation of people, which breach human rights and destroy lives.
Corruption
'Working together towards a corruption-free world by promoting and defending integrity, justice and the rule of law.’

About INTERPOL

INTERPOL is the world’s largest international police organization, with 187 member countries. It exists to help create a safer world by supporting law enforcement agencies worldwide to combat crime.

INTERPOL has four core functions, which provide:


Last modified on 6 Nov 2008 
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