PSP officers accused of torture at Rato police station to await trial in Évora's 'police and politicians' prison

Sunday, 8 March 2026RSS
PSP officers accused of torture at Rato police station to await trial in Évora's 'police and politicians' prison

Seven PSP officers are facing preventive detention due to serious allegations of torture and other crimes against vulnerable individuals, including homeless people and foreigners. This follows an investigation that revealed disturbing incidents of violence at the Rato police station in Lisbon. The Minister of Internal Administration has defended the majority of police professionals while emphasizing the need for accountability and trust in law enforcement. The case has raised significant concerns about the conduct of police officers and the protection of human rights within the security forces.

Context & Explainers

Preventive detention (prisão preventiva) is a court-ordered measure that keeps a suspect in custody before trial when a judge decides there is a real risk they might flee, tamper with evidence, or pose a danger to others. It is temporary and not a conviction; in the recent case five of the 37 alleged members were ordered to await the investigation in preventive detention by the Central Criminal Investigation Court. Those detained should request a lawyer and can seek consular assistance if they are foreign nationals, while family or lawyers can ask the court to review or lift the measure.

The PSP (Polícia de Segurança Pública)

The PSP (Polícia de Segurança Pública) is Portugal's national civilian police force, founded in 1867. Responsible for defending Republican democracy and safeguarding internal security and citizens' rights, the PSP polices major cities—Lisbon, Porto, Faro—and large urban areas, covering only 4% of Portugal's territory but roughly half the population. Led by a National Director under the Ministry of Internal Affairs, its approximately 21,500 officers handle preventive policing, crime investigation, public order, airport security, diplomatic protection, private security regulation, firearms licensing, and border control (since 2023).​

PSP vs. GNR: The PSP is civilian with police-focused training and urban jurisdiction, while the GNR (Guarda Nacional Republicana) is military (gendarmerie) with military training, covering 96% of Portugal's rural and suburban territory. Both share core public safety missions but differ fundamentally in nature, training, and geographic responsibility.

AI Summary AvailableSeven officers held over alleged torture in LisbonRead the synthesized summary with context and explainers
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