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Criminal Investigation and Detection Group

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Criminal Investigation and Detection Group
Seal of the CIDG
Seal of the CIDG
AbbreviationCIDG
Motto"We Seek the Truth"
Agency overview
Formed1953; 71 years ago (1953)
Preceding agencies
  • Criminal Information Service, Philippine Constabulary
  • Criminal Investigation Service Command (until 1993)
  • Criminal Investigation Service (until 1999)
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionPhilippines
Operational structure
Agency executives
  • PBGEN Nicolas D. Torre III[1], Acting Director
  • PCOL Rolindo M. Suguilon, Acting Deputy Director for Administration
  • PCOL David N. Poklay, Deputy Director for Operations
  • PCOL Ranie P. Hachuela, Acting Chief of Staff
Parent agencyPhilippine National Police
Website
cidg.pnp.gov.ph Edit this at Wikidata

The Criminal Investigation and Detection Group (CIDG) is the primary investigation arm of the Philippine National Police.

History

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The Criminal Investigation and Detection Group was established as the Criminal Information Service whose origin traces back as early as 1901 shortly after the establishment of the Philippine Constabulary when the Information Section was established as mandated by the Section 2, Article 255 of the Philippine Commission. In 1920 the Information Division was integrated with the United States Army Forces in the Far East and its detectives participated at the Battle of Bataan, many of which also were forced to participate at the Bataan Death March.[2]

After World War II, the Military Police Command was activated in lieu of the Philippine Constabulary. A Criminal Investigation Branch of the G2 to investigate crimes and maintain peace and order. This division remain operational after the independence of the Philippines from the United States on July 4, 1946.[2]

In 1953, the Philippine Constabulary was integrated to the Armed Forces of the Philippines and a Police Affairs Division was created. A Criminal Laboratory was made by the division to support constabulary units with background in scientific criminology. On January 19, 1953, the General Headquarters of the Armed Forces issued General Order Nr. 14 which resulted to the reorganization of the defunct Philippine Constabulary into two main components, a general staff unit, called the Intelligence Division or C2, and an operating special staff unit, the Criminal Investigation Service (CIS).[2]

On October 28, 1955, a Police Intelligence Branch was created by the CIS and in 1958 the investigation body was elevated to a division. The CIS, adopted Criminal Investigation Office as its new name on October 5, 1960, but reverted to its old name two months later. Criminal Investigation Office on October 5, 1960. It was again renamed to Criminal Investigation Service Command (CISC) in 1989 and to its present name in 1999.[2]

Units

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Under the Director, it has three (3) deputies:[3]

  • Deputy Director for Administration,
  • Deputy Director for Operation, and
  • Chief of Staff

It also has divisions such as:[3]

  • Administrative and Record Management Division,
  • Investigation Division,
  • Operation Management Division, and
  • Intelligence Division

The group also has:[3]

  • Legal officer,
  • Police-community relations officers,
  • Public information office,
  • Secretary to Division Staff,
  • DLOS,
  • Personnel Record Management Section,
  • Budget & Finance,
  • HRDDS,
  • GPSMU,
  • Station Health Unit,
  • Logistic Section,
  • Case Referral Monitoring Center,
  • Technical Support Section,
  • GESPO, and
  • Office of the Supervisor for Non-Uniformed Personnel

The CIDG also has the following operational units:[3]

  • Anti-Fraud Commercial Crime Unit,
  • Anti-Organized Crime Unit,
  • Anti-Trans National Crime Unit,
  • General Services Division,
  • Acting Chief, Major Crimes Investigation Unit,
  • Women and Children Complaint Unit, and
  • Detective and Special Operation Unit.

Its regional units (RFUs = Regional Force Units) are:[3]

  • CIDG NCR
  • CIDG RFU 1
  • CIDG RFU 2
  • CIDG RFU 3
  • CIDG RFU 4A
  • CIDG RFU 4B
  • CIDG RFU 5
  • CIDG RFU 6
  • CIDG RFU 7
  • CIDG RFU 8
  • CIDG RFU 9
  • CIDG RFU 10
  • CIDG RFU 11
  • CIDG RFU 12
  • CIDG RFU 13
  • CIDG RFU 14 (Bangsamoro)
  • CIDG RFU 15 (Cordillera)

List of directors

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Name Term Ref.
Col. Hospicio Tuazon January 19, 1953 – 1954 [4]
Col. Delfin Dela Cruz 1954–1955 [4]
BGen. Ramon Gelvezon September 1, 1955 – February 2, 1959 [4]
Maj. Constantino G. Navarro February 4 – May 13, 1959 [4]
Maj. Benjamin Santiago May 14, 1959 – January 1, 1960 [4]
Lt. Col. Daniel Iway February 2, 1960 – November 30, 1961 [4]
Col. Safio Bayron December 1, 1961 – January 9, 1962 [4]
Col. Jose Maristela January 10, 1962 – August 22, 1963 [4]
Col. Francisco Jimenez August 23, 1963 – September 2, 1963 [4]
Col. Gaudencio Gardi September 3, 1963 to June 3, 1964 [4]
Col. Benjamin Tolentino January 2, 1965 – January 1, 1966 [4]
Col. Robustiano C. Javier February 11, 1966 – May 12, 1966 [4]
Col. Felizardo R. Tanabe March 18, 1966 – September 21, 1967 [4]
Col. Simplicio Belisario September 22, 1967 – November 16, 1967 [4]
BGen. Pacencio S. Magtibay November 16, 1967 – January 31, 1968 [4]
BGen. Cesar M. Garcia February 1, 1968 – June 4, 1968 [4]
Col. Rafael M. Dumalo Jr. June 5, 1968 – December 15, 1968 [4]
Col. Palayo C. Perez June 19, 1969 – June 15, 1970 [4]
BGen. Prospero Olivas December 16, 1970 – November 10, 1973 [4]
BGen. Antonio P. Uy November 11, 1973 – August 3, 1981 [4]
BGen. Hermogenes Peralta Jr. September 1, 1981 – April 15, 1985 [4]
BGen. Romeo R. Zulueta April 16, 1985 – March 24, 1988 [4]
BGen. Evaristo G. Cariño March 25, 1988 – April 15, 1989 [4]
BGen. Pantaleon G. Dumalo April 16, 1989 – February 8, 1991 [4]
P/CSUPT Vicente G. Vinarao February 9, 1991 – August 19, 1992 [4]
P/CSUPT Angel H. Quizon March 4, 1993 – February 7, 1994 [4]
P/CSUPT Romeo M. Acop February 22, 1994 – June 19, 1995 [4]
P/CSUPT Ramsey Ocampo June 20, 1995 – June 15, 1996 [4]
P/CSUPT Efren Q. Fernandez June 16, 1996 – August 24, 1998 [4]
P/CSUPT Lucas M. Managuelod August 25, 1998 – 2000 [4][5]
P/CSUPT Francisco Zubia 2000 – 2001 [6]
P/DIR Nestorio Gualberto 2001 – September 14, 2002 [7]
P/CSUPT Eduardo Matillano September 14, 2002 – 2003 [8][9]
P/DIR Arturo Lomibao 2003 – 2004
P/DIR Jesus Verzosa September 12, 2004 – 2006 [10][11]
P/DIR Edgardo M. Doromal 2006 – 2008 [12][13]
P/DIR Raul Castañeda 2008 – 2010 [14]
P/DIR Leon Nilo dela Cruz 2010 – April 7, 2011 [15][16]
P/DIR Samuel D. Pagdilao 2011 – February 14, 2013 [17]
P/DIR Francisco A. Uyami Jr. February 14, 2013 – December 7, 2013 [18]
P/DIR Benjamin Magalong December 7, 2013 – July 11, 2015 [19]
P/CSUPT Victor P. Deona July 11, 2015 – July 2016 [19]
P/DIR Roel Barcena Obusan July 2016 – November 19, 2018 [20]
PMGen. Amador V. Corpus November 18, 2018 – October 21, 2019 [21]
PMGen. Joel Coronel October 21, 2019 – January 30, 2021 [21]
PMGen. Albert Ignatius Ferro January 30, 2021 – March 5, 2022 [22]
PMGen. Eliseo DC Cruz March 5, 2022 – August 2022
PBGen. Ronald Lee August 2022 – January 10, 2023 [23]
PMGen. Romeo Caramat January 10, 2023 – May 3, 2024 [24]
PMGen. Leo M. Francisco May 3, 2024 – September 24, 2024 [25]
PBGen. Nicolas Deloso Torre III September 25, 2024 – present

[1]

Acting in italic.

Portrayal

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CIDG was used by the Philippine TV series Ang Probinsyano until 2019. The main protagonist, some antagonists and some supporting casts of this series are playing as police officers of the group.[26][27][28]

References

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  1. ^ a b Bolledo, Jairo (September 25, 2024). "Nicolas Torre, Davao's top cop who led Quiboloy arrest, is new CIDG chief". Rappler. Retrieved September 25, 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d "CIDG History: Timeline and Milestones". Criminal Investigation and Detection Group. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Key Officers - CIDG".
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad "BRIEF HISTORY". pcidg1.fortunecity.ws. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  5. ^ "CIDG: Sack cop general in gas scam". Philstar.com. 2000-01-25. Retrieved 2024-01-20.
  6. ^ "QC court throws out Cudal's petition". Philstar.com. November 29, 2000. Retrieved 2024-08-29.
  7. ^ Mendez, Christina; Jaime, Mendez (2001-09-12). "PNP starts probe of top officials linked by '". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  8. ^ Mendez, Christina; Laude, Jaime (2002-09-14). "New CIDG chief runs after Ping". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  9. ^ Mendez, Christina; Clapano, Jose Rodel (2003-07-23). "Lacson to Matillano: Keep me out of it". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  10. ^ Mendez, Christina (2004-09-13). "Aglipay begins term extension, vows to do best". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  11. ^ Sison, Bebot Jr.; Felipe, Cecille Suerte (2006-11-30). "4 Chinese arrested for smuggling toy guns". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  12. ^ "CIDG chief gets second star, 4 more police directors named". GMA News Online. 2007-01-13. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  13. ^ "[G.R. No. 182498 : August 16, 2011] In The Matter Of The Petition For The Writ Of Amparo Of Engineer Morced N. Tagitis; And Mary Jean B. Tagitis, Herein Represented By Atty. Felipe P. Arcilla, Jr., Attorney-In-Fact V. General Edgardo M. Doromal, Chief, Criminal Investigation And Detection Group, Et Al. : August 2011 - Philippine Supreme Court Resolutions". chanrobles.com. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  14. ^ Alquitran, Non (2009-03-23). "CIDG set to release Dacer case findings". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  15. ^ Sison, Bebot Jr.; Felipe, Cecille Suerte (2010-04-19). "CIDG chief vows to stay apolitical". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  16. ^ Ramos, Marlon (2011-04-07). "Top-level PNP revamp seen". INQUIRER.net. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  17. ^ "243 wanted persons arrested in January — CIDG". GMA News Online. 2012-02-01. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  18. ^ "Uyami replaces Pagdilao as CIDG chief". ABS-CBN News. 2013-02-14.
  19. ^ a b Sison, Bebot Jr.; Felipe, Cecille Suerte (2015-08-11). "New CIDG chief named". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  20. ^ Gonzales, Cathrine (2018-11-20). "PNP names new CIDG chief, reshuffles other officers". INQUIRER.net. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  21. ^ a b Cabrera, Romina (2019-10-21). "Key PNP officials reshuffled". Philstar.com. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  22. ^ "The race for the PNP chief: Who is Maj. Gen. Bert Ferro? - Journalnews". 2021-10-12. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  23. ^ "Retirement of key officials triggers another PNP revamp".
  24. ^ Mangosing, Frances (2023-01-10). "CIDG chief, police intel official swap posts". INQUIRER.net. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  25. ^ Tupas, Emmanuel (May 3, 2024). "New CIDG chief named". The Philippine Star. Retrieved May 3, 2024.
  26. ^ FPJ's Ang Probinsyano | Season 1: Episode 3 (with English subtitles), retrieved 2024-01-01
  27. ^ FPJ's Ang Probinsyano: Carreon helps the CIDG, retrieved 2024-01-01
  28. ^ FPJ's Ang Probinsyano: The fall of the CIDG Boys, retrieved 2024-01-01
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