The International Enforcement and Extradition Directorate

International Enforcement – INTERPOL

INTERPOL serves as the international law enforcement arm of the UCE, responsible for the investigation, apprehension, and extradition of individuals charged with violations of international law under SCE jurisdiction.

Leadership & Oversight

  • Governed by:
  • 1 President
  • 3 Vice Presidents (each representing a global region)
  • 9 Delegates elected by the National Chief Council
  • The President oversees global operations and may only be overruled by the UNGA or an SCE ruling.

National Chief Council

  • Every Full Member nation appoints a National INTERPOL Chief Officer (NICO) to represent its interests.
  • The Council:
  • Approves operational policies and annual budgets
  • Elects INTERPOL’s leadership
  • Passes internal resolutions via a two-thirds majority vote

Operational Structure

  • INTERPOL officers are assigned to National Central Bureaus (NCBs) embedded within national law enforcement or justice ministries.
  • Officers rotate across countries every three years to ensure impartiality and global knowledge exchange.
  • NCIOs coordinate INTERPOL activity within their own countries, particularly in enforcing SCE rulings.

Authority by Membership Tier

Membership TierSCE JurisdictionINTERPOL Operations
Full MembersFull Legal AuthorityFull Enforcement Authority
Observer MembersLimited (advisory only without UN resolution)May assist with UN Binding Resolution
Non-Aligned EntitiesNoneNo legal or advisory authority
  • In Observer Member nations, INTERPOL and SCE operations require a UN Binding Resolution to have legal force. Without it, their role is strictly advisory.
  • In Non-Aligned states, UCE entities have no authority, and individuals fleeing to these regions are effectively beyond the Confederation’s reach.

Structure

Supreme Executive Leadership

  • President of INTERPOL
  • Role: Global head of INTERPOL; holds supreme operational authority across all jurisdictions. Sets long-term strategy, authorizes transnational investigations, and oversees metahuman deployment protocols.
  • Reports to: UN General Assembly (UNGA) and the Supreme Court of Earth (SCE)
  • Term: 10 years (renewable once)
  • Special Powers: Emergency override of national NCB protocols; classified access to all metahuman and magical threat dossiers.
  • Vice Presidents of INTERPOL (x3)
  • Roles: Oversee operations within their assigned Superregion:
  • Americas and the Arctic Circle
  • Eurasia and the Middle East
  • Africa-Pacific and Off-World Territories
  • Term: 7 years
  • Responsibilities: Regional resource allocation, strategic initiatives, escalation of high-risk extradition cases.

Strategic Oversight and Governance

  • National Chief Council (NCC)
  • Composition: One National INTERPOL Chief Officer (NICO) per Full Member nation.
  • Duties:
  • Elect the INTERPOL President and Vice Presidents
  • Approve INTERPOL’s global budget and operational mandates
  • Propose and pass internal policy resolutions (2/3 majority)

National Level Enforcement

  • National INTERPOL Chief Officer (NICO)
  • Role: Supreme INTERPOL authority within a Full Member nation.
  • Term: 6 years (then reassigned to another NCB)
  • Duties:
  • Coordinate all domestic INTERPOL operations
  • Enforce SCE rulings and manage extradition requests
  • Direct integration of foreign IPOs into national units
  • Maintain direct contact with the host nation’s justice ministry

Field Operations and International Officers

  • INTERPOL Personnel and Officers (IPO)
  • Rank Structure:
  • Senior Enforcement Officer (SEO) – Leads tactical and high-risk international operations; field commander rank.
  • Enforcement Officer (EO) – Standard field agents; highly trained in languages, investigation, magical/metahuman assessment, and extradition procedures.
  • Junior Enforcement Officer (JEO) – Entry-level IPO; accompanies teams, focuses on documentation, surveillance, and interagency communications.
  • Rotation Policy: Reassigned every 3 years to a new NCB to preserve neutrality and maintain global operational awareness.

Specialized Divisions

  • Division of Magical and Metahuman Affairs (DMMA)
  • Director of Magical Enforcement (DoME) – Oversees operations involving spellcraft, curses, and arcane violations.
  • Director of Metahuman Compliance (DoMC) – Manages cases involving powered individuals; coordinates with HAVOC and PSYOP.
  • INTERPOL Super Soldier Commandant (ISSC) – Head of agents who have undergone the INTERPOL Super Soldier Serum (ISSS) protocol; also oversees De-Supering compliance for outgoing IPOs.
  • Office of Legal Affairs and SCE Liaison (OLASL)
  • Provides in-house legal counsel
  • Manages coordination with the Supreme Court of Earth
  • Directorate of Intelligence and Surveillance Operations (DISO)
  • Responsible for predictive analytics, criminal trend forecasting, and intelligence-sharing between NCBs.

Assets

INTERPOL maintains a tiered detainment framework designed to handle the diverse range of international criminals, fugitives, and anomalous threats subject to United Confederation of Earth (UCE) jurisdiction. While most detainees are processed through conventional channels, select individuals of extraordinary risk or political sensitivity are held within INTERPOL Supermax Prison Facilities (ISPFs).

Oversight and Regional Command

Each of INTERPOL’s three Vice Presidents oversees one of the UCE’s designated Super-Regions:

  • Americas & Arctic Circle
  • Eurasia & Middle East
  • Africa-Pacific & Off-World Territories

Each Super-Region houses a single ISPF, directly administered by INTERPOL and insulated from national authority. These high-security complexes fall under the exclusive jurisdiction of the supervising Vice President, who may appoint or dismiss facility Wardens at their discretion. Only a 2/3 supermajority vote from the National Chief Council, or a direct override by the INTERPOL President, may countermand a Vice President’s authority in these matters.


Prisoner Classification System

To balance transparency with operational security, INTERPOL employs a tiered color-coded classification system:


Code Green Prisoners ("Greens")

  • Definition: Standard international offenders detained under active extradition requests.
  • Custody: Held in national or regional prison systems while awaiting formal transfer to the requesting state.
  • Protocol: Processed under routine extradition and judicial procedures via SCE directives.
  • Note: These represent the vast majority of INTERPOL detainments and are typically non-anomalous and non-political.

Code Yellow Prisoners ("Bumblebees")

  • Definition: Individuals possessing magical, metahuman, or extradimensional traits that pose a threat to conventional containment.
  • Custody: Typically housed in HAVOC-operated facilities around the globe.
  • Protocol: INTERPOL defers to HAVOC as the standard containment agency for long-term imprisonment of anomalous individuals, as sanctioned by the Supreme Court of Earth.
  • Designation Criteria: Threat to standard infrastructure, prior containment breach history, or active anomalous abilities.

Code Red Prisoners ("Redhoods")

  • Definition: High-risk individuals who cannot be entrusted to national facilities or external agencies due to political sensitivity, systemic corruption, national security conflicts, or strategic value.
  • Custody: Held exclusively within one of the three ISPFs, operated directly by INTERPOL.
  • Protocol:
  • Guarded and managed by specialized IPO detachments stationed on 10-year deployments.
  • Access, information, and population numbers are classified at the highest level—not disclosed to the UNGA, SCE, or even the host nation.
  • These facilities are hardened for physical, magical, psychic, and political security.
  • Justifications for Redhood Classification:
  • Interception of corrupt NCBs or compromised national justice systems.
  • Risk of extradition misuse or unlawful execution.
  • Strategic asset requiring neutral, supranational custody (e.g., war criminals, rogue metahuman leaders, ex-magical heads of state).

Facility Characteristics

  • ISPFs are not mass incarceration complexes. They are compact, fortress-like installations designed for maximum containment and discretion.
  • Each is shielded against magical influence, psionic intrusion, and electronic compromise.
  • Their locations, while technically known to the host nation, are functionally independent and benefit from extraterritorial protections under UCE treaties.
ISPF CodeFormal NameCodenameRegionHidden Location
ISPF–01UCDC–01: Arktikos DivisionArktikosAmericas & Arctic CircleQueen Elizabeth Islands
ISPF–02UCDC–02: Petra DivisionPetraEurasia & Middle EastSubterranean Petra, Jordan
ISPF–03UCDC–03: Nyanga DivisionNyangaAfrica-Pacific & Off-WorldMount Nyangani, Zimbabwe
INTERPOL Integration of H-TAS Threat Assessment Protocol

By default, the United Confederation of Earth (UCE) has authorized INTERPOL to utilize the HAVOC Threat Assessment System (H-TAS) for initial intelligence analysis and risk classification. Despite acknowledged concerns regarding its origin, developed within a U.S.-centric institutional framework, H-TAS remains one of the most advanced and adaptive threat modeling systems currently in operation. Its dual-matrix design offers a dynamic synthesis of raw capability and behavioral risk.

However, recognizing the potential for embedded political, cultural, racial, financial, or ideological bias within HAVOC’s original assessments, INTERPOL’s Directorate of Intelligence and Surveillance Operations (DISO) is formally tasked with refining and correcting all received H-TAS data before any actionable interpretation is issued.

This internal recalibration process is formally designated “Data Cleansing”, though colloquially referred to as “un-Americanizing” the model. Through this process, DISO systematically adjusts or reinterprets both the Ability Matrix (AM) and the Capability Matrix (CM) to align with UCE’s standardized neutrality protocols and universal threat indexing standards.

The resulting product is known as the DISO-Confirmed H-TAS (DCH). Only the DCH—not the raw H-TAS score—is admissible for use by the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), the Supreme Court of Earth (SCE), or the Global Security Council (UNGSC).

The extent of recalibration required varies dramatically by case. In some instances, DCH conversion may involve only minor adjustments (e.g., ±2 Capability points). In others, the entire classification of a Person of Interest (POI) may be overturned or reclassified, particularly if the original HAVOC score reflects disproportionate threat elevation tied to nationality, ideology, or non-Western magical or psychic traditions.

Education

INTERPOL officers, known as IPOs (International Personnel and Officers), represent the apex of global law enforcement expertise. All IPOs are trained through the Academy of International Justice and Enforcement (AIJE), the UCE’s premier institution for international policing, metahuman regulation, extradition protocol, and legal harmonization. Education within INTERPOL is rigorous, standardized, and global in scope, reflecting the complex and varied nature of planetary law and multilateral enforcement.

Entry Requirements: Candidates for admission to AIJE must meet at least one of the following criteria:

  • A completed Bachelor’s or Master’s degree from an accredited university in their home country.
  • A minimum of six years of professional police service within a recognized national or regional force.
  • Military veterans with a verified honorable discharge and relevant field experience.
  • Individuals are legally designated as Subject Matter Experts (SMEs) in fields such as forensic science, digital security, magical law, metahuman containment, or interdimensional phenomena.

Minimum Training Duration:

  • 12 months of full-time residence and training at the AIJE campus.
  • Optional tracks may extend to 24–36 months for advanced credentials (e.g., diplomatic law enforcement, cross-dimensional ethics, magical jurisprudence).

Curriculum and Specialization

The AIJE provides a holistic and highly technical education covering:

  • International law, extradition protocols, and UCE legal harmonization standards.
  • Forensic science, crime scene analysis, and digital investigation techniques.
  • Cultural and governmental systems (e.g., monarchic justice vs. democratic norms).
  • Magical, psychic, and metahuman legal frameworks.
  • Tactical field operations, high-risk retrieval, and combat training.
  • Planetary ethics, civil liberties, and rights of the accused under UCE law.

Select candidates are authorized to undergo the INTERPOL Super Soldier Serum (ISSS) regimen at the AIJE's Metahuman Oversight Lab. Upon retirement or reassignment, recipients are required to undergo De-Supering Protocols to restore baseline physiology and terminate metahuman enhancement.


Legal Accreditation

In addition to training enforcement agents, the AIJE is recognized by the UCE as one of the only institutions capable of producing internationally accredited:

  • International Prosecutors
  • Defense Attorneys
  • Judges
  • Legal Diplomats

Legal professionals who complete the AIJE’s certification pathway may practice law in any Full Member nation of the UCE without additional national qualifications. This has made AIJE a global nexus for jurisprudence and intergovernmental legal exchange.


Equity and Access

Access to the AIJE is meritocratic but remains highly competitive and resource-intensive. While candidates from all UCE Full Member nations may apply, Observer Member applicants require sponsorship or special UNGA authorization. Non-Aligned citizens are barred from attending unless individually sanctioned by an SCE decree. Disparities do exist:

  • Urban and high-development nations tend to dominate admissions due to better access to accredited universities and military service programs.
  • The AIJE has introduced scholarship initiatives and special veteran entry tracks to improve geographic and socioeconomic diversity.
  • Magical and psychic minorities are offered tailored entry paths via cooperation with ICON and PSYOP.

Location of the AIJE

Primary Campus: Mount Erebus Concordance Complex – Ross Island, Antarctica

  • Located on the glacial periphery of Mount Erebus, one of the southernmost active volcanoes on Earth.
  • Chosen for its extreme isolation, enhanced security, and symbolic neutrality.
  • Hosts high-tech subterranean training arenas, climate-controlled classrooms, magical shielding zones, and ISSS bioengineering facilities.
  • Shared security perimeter with an INTERPOL Orbital Elevator Station, allowing rapid global deployment and reinforcement access from above.

Alternate Nickname: “The Cold Court” – referencing both its harsh environment and its training of global judicial enforcers.

"Connecting Police for a Safer World"

Alternative Names
The International Enforcement and Extradition Directorate of the United Confederation of Earth | INTERPOL
Demonym
INTERPOL Personnel and Officers (IPO)
Gazetteer

Primary Headquarters

INTERPOL Global Headquarters

Lyon, France

  • Central administrative hub for INTERPOL operations and diplomatic coordination.
  • Houses the President’s Office, Global Operations Command, and the Strategic Compliance Archives.
  • Secured facility with direct diplomatic links to the UNGA and SCE.
  • Sometimes referred to as "The Watchtower of Law."

Regional Operations Bureaus

Americas & Arctic Circle Operations Bureau

Santiago, Chile

  • Oversees enforcement in North, Central, South America, and the Arctic territories.
  • Close partnership with HAVOC and the South American Regional Council.
  • Coordinates regional NCBs and tactical deployments across the Western Hemisphere.

Eurasia & Middle East Operations Bureau

Baku, Azerbaijan

  • Key node in managing enforcement efforts across Europe, Central Asia, and the Middle East.
  • Includes intelligence-sharing satellites for monitoring anomalous threats.
  • Contains the Red Scales Archive, a repository of magical war crime documentation.

Africa-Pacific & Off-World Operations Bureau

Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (Earth), and UCE Ascension Spire – Lunar Orbit (Off-World)

  • Divided across the Earth and orbit.
  • Dar es Salaam functions as the regional Earth-side HQ.
  • The Ascension Spire on a stable lunar orbit houses extraterrestrial enforcement liaisons, off-world jurisdictional processing, and extradimensional protocol units.

INTERPOL Supermax Prison Facilities (ISPFs)

Designated for Code Red Prisoners under exclusive INTERPOL jurisdiction. Operate as hardened, autonomous, high-risk facilities outside national control.

ISPF–01: UCDC–01 “Arktikos Division”

Queen Elizabeth Islands, Canadian Arctic

  • Hardened against both metahuman assault and psychic infiltration.
  • Specialized for cold-weather resilience and physical-political containment.
  • Used primarily for rogue paramilitary leaders, metahuman supremacists, and Arctic-aligned warlords.

ISPF–02: UCDC–02 “Petra Division”

Subterranean Petra, Jordan

  • Carved into the ancient rock beneath Petra.
  • Magically shielded against extradimensional portals and arcane leakage.
  • Houses former magical heads of state, cursed war criminals, and ideological extremists with thaumaturgic ties.

ISPF–03: UCDC–03 “Nyanga Division”

Mount Nyangani, Zimbabwe

  • Integrated into a metaphysical faultline, making astral escape impossible.
  • Used for telepaths, psionic war criminals, magical revolutionaries, and identity-shifting prisoners.
  • Known colloquially as “The Memory Sink.”

Educational & Training Complex

Academy of International Justice and Enforcement (AIJE)

Mount Erebus Concordance Complex, Ross Island, Antarctica

  • INTERPOL’s sole global academy for training IPOs and legal officers.
  • Offers full-spectrum instruction in extradimensional law, metahuman ethics, high-risk enforcement, and planetary civil liberties.
  • Shared security perimeter with a classified Orbital Elevator Dock for zero-hour deployment.
  • Known within the ranks as “The Cold Court.”

Specialized Intelligence Infrastructure

Directorate of Intelligence & Surveillance Operations (DISO) Command Node

Oslo, Norway

  • Coordinates global surveillance analytics, trend forecasting, and predictive threat modeling.
  • Hosts the Ananke Core, a predictive AI suite used for preemptive interdiction of planetary threats.
  • Also monitors Redhood Protocol Violations across all ISPFs and affiliated agencies.

Metahuman & Magical Coordination Zones

Division of Magical and Metahuman Affairs (DMMA) Central Bureau

Tashkent, Uzbekistan

  • Interface node between INTERPOL, HAVOC, PSYOP, and the EMA.
  • Processes magical and metahuman case referrals, detainment authorizations, and extradition escalation.
  • Contains diplomatic review chambers for representatives of ICON and non-terrestrial magical societies.

Parent Organization

Integrated Multilateral Partnership under UCE Mandate

WAPID and INTERPOL operate as coequal arms of the United Confederation of Earth (UCE), with recognized jurisdiction in their respective domains. They share open communication pipelines, participate in joint operations, and exchange personnel through secondments, particularly in high-priority cases involving Redhoods or Mind Demon incursions.

Interjurisdictional Mutual Observer Accord

Under the authority of the United Confederation of Earth (UCE), INTERPOL and the European Magic Authority (EMA) maintain a Mutual Observer Relationship with Conditional Recognition, enshrined in the Brussels Concordat of Magical-Secular Coordination (2023). This framework establishes non-binding cooperation, mutual consultation rights, and limited extradition authority over magical subjects.

Conditional Cooperation under Cultural Sovereignty Clause

INTERPOL and ICON cooperate on magical and metahuman law enforcement only when ICON tribal sovereignty is respected, and extradition is explicitly approved via either the Tribe’s recognized national government or a Binding Iroquois Resolution (BIR) authorized by both the Grand Council and Women’s Council.

Strategic Liaison Partnership with Restricted Autonomy

Though HAVOC is technically a UCE-aligned agency due to its UNGSC affiliation, INTERPOL does not formally recognize HAVOC as an independent or sovereign international law enforcement body. Their partnership is limited to data exchange, H-TAS score consultation, and high-risk containment logistics. Operational collaboration requires UNGSC authorization or a Binding Resolution from the UNGA.

NONE

  • Classification: Hostile Non-State Actor
  • INTERPOL Recognition: None
  • Diplomatic Immunity: None
  • Legal Standing: Declared Enemy Entity under INTERPOL Charter Article XIV (Special Designation Clause)
  • Redhood Status: Confirmed Tier I Entity with affiliated leadership and paramilitary commanders held at ISPF–02 (Petra Division) and ISPF–03 (Nyanga Division)

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