Wenn Leute, wie die SPD Schratzen, wie Otto Schily, Schröder, Steinmeier vom Polizei Aufbau im Ausland sprachen, kommt halt immer und überall nur der Aufbau von Verbrecher Organisationen raus. Besonders beliebt: Top Drogen Bosse, Mörder, Kopf Abhacker und Profi kriminelle Clans. Hier in Rumänien, wurde deshalb der Vize Innenminister gefeuert, der höchste Polizei Chef, aber was ja Nichts Neues ist, wenn dumme und Kriminelle mit Diplomaten Pass Auslands Politik machen. siehe Ludgar Vollmer und seine Bundes Druckerei Geschäfte im Ausland, wie auch dort natürlich der Polizei Aufbau. Schuld haben wie in Afghanistan, dumme Deutsche Politiker, denn die Auswahl für die Polizei Ausbildung, wie den Verkauf von Posten hatte man immer den einheimischen Verbrecher Clans überlassen. Und damit die Geschäfte gut laufen, verkaufte man Geschäfts Visa, an die komplette Top Mafia im Balkan, wodurch man sagen kann: Die FES und Grüne Politiker mit Joschka Fischer, organisierten das grösste Europäische Verbrecher Kartelle, für Terroristen, Mörder und den Top Drogen Bossen! Es seien nur die Osmanis in Hamburg erwähnt. Bordell Service immer inklusive!
Romanian police in corruption scandals
29/11/2010
Two corruption scandals that rocked the Romanian police may deepen the European partners' mistrust amid the the country's efforts to join Schengen
By Paul Ciocoiu for Southeast European Times in Bucharest – 29/11/10
Romania's National Anti-corruption Department (DNA) has uncovered hundreds of cases of police corruption. [Gabriel Petrescu/SETimes]
The head of the Romanian police and the deputy minister of interior were sacked last week after a series of corruption scandals that has damaged its image as the institution plays a central role in the Schengen accession efforts.
Chief Commissioner Petre Toba and State Secretary Valentin Fatuloiu, deputy minister of the interior, were dismissed by Prime Minister Emil Boc at the request of the Minister Traian Igas, following two separate scandals involving Fatuloiu.
Toba was sacked for flawed management after a daring daytime assassination in the northeastern town of Piatra Neamt in mid-November. A local mobster was shot dead in a café in an apparent faceoff among rival gangs.
An internal inquiry by the interior ministry found that, despite warnings from the intelligence services, local police ignored the proliferation of crimes and ditched about 2,200 investigation files concerning serious crimes. In about 100 cases, citizens' written complaints weren't even registered, as stipulated by law.
The head of the county police, who was a protégée of Fatuloiu, was sacked after the inquiry disclosed he had close connections with the murdered mobster.
In a separate case, Fatuloiu also had to account for his alleged ties to another controversial businessman, Catalin Chelu, after it emerged Chelu tried to offer Fatuloiu a 1m-euro bribe to help him shelve several tax evasion and money laundering cases swirling around Chelu.
Fatuloiu said he informed the National Anti-corruption Department (DNA) about Chelu's intention. Chelu and his middlemen were caught red-handed when they were preparing to deliver the money and two luxury cars.
But Fatuloiu could not answer questions about how his relationship with the businessman started in the first place, or about his involvement in the Piatra Neamt killing.
Fatuloiu's case, by far the more prominent, sends mixed signals abroad, analysts say.
"We may say the scandal has a somewhat positive side, too: it shows the criminal investigation apparatus is doing its job, that the state fights back when it has to deal with such high profile corruption scandals," Laura Stefan, anti-corruption co-ordinator with the Romanian Academical Society (SAR), a leading think tank, told SETimes.
"But this is not really breaking any news to the European Commission. They know, for instance, the National Anti-corruption Department (DNA) is effective," she added.
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Setimes
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