Kaliningrad University of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

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Kaliningrad Branch of St. Petersburg University of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
(KF SPbU Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation)

Former names

Kaliningrad secondary special police school of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR
Year of foundation

Type

Federal State Educational Institution of Higher Professional Education

Rector

Chief Police Colonel S.V. Veklenko
Location

Legal address
236006, Kaliningrad,

Moskovsky pr., 8
Website Coordinates: /  54°42′44″ n. w.20°29′38″ E. d. 54.71222° N. w. 20.49389° E. d. / 54.71222; 20.49389

(G) (I) K:Educational institutions founded in 1953

Kaliningrad Law University of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia

- federal state educational institution of higher professional education. The founder of the university is the Government of the Russian Federation. The powers of the founder on behalf of the government are exercised by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. The Institute is an independent institution of internal affairs bodies, directly subordinate to the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. The procedure for serving institute employees with special ranks of enlisted and commanding personnel, cadets, students and adjuncts is regulated by the Law of the Russian Federation “On Police”, the Regulations on Service in the Internal Affairs Directorate of the Russian Federation and the Charter of the Institute.

The educational process is organized in full-time and part-time forms of study. Boys and girls under the age of 25 with complete secondary or secondary vocational education are accepted for full-time study. They are enrolled in the staff of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, take the Oath, have the right to wear uniforms, enjoy all the rights of a police officer and perform the duties provided for by the Federal Law “On the Police” and the Regulations on Service in Internal Affairs Bodies. Upon completion of training, graduates are awarded the special rank of police lieutenant and awarded a diploma of higher legal education.

Employees of internal affairs bodies under the age of 35 are accepted for correspondence courses. For those who have completed secondary general or secondary vocational education, the period of study is 6 years.

The university has a faculty for training specialists on a paid basis. Training is conducted in the specialty “Jurisprudence” - 5 years full-time and 6 part-time. Upon completion of their studies at the faculty, students receive state-issued diplomas of higher legal education.

Story

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Notes

Links

  • Time-tested traditions. 55 years of the Kaliningrad Law Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia: pages of history and modernity. - Kaliningrad: Knight, 2008. - 200 p.

An excerpt characterizing the Kaliningrad Law Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia

Who thinks about you too!
As she, with her beautiful hand,
Walking along the golden harp,
With its passionate harmony
Calling to itself, calling you!
Another day or two, and heaven will come...
But ah! your friend won't live!
And he had not yet finished singing the last words when the young people in the hall were preparing to dance and the musicians in the choir began to knock their feet and cough.

Pierre was sitting in the living room, where Shinshin, as if with a visitor from abroad, began a political conversation with him that was boring for Pierre, to which others joined. When the music started playing, Natasha entered the living room and, going straight to Pierre, laughing and blushing, said:
- Mom told me to ask you to dance.
“I’m afraid of confusing the figures,” said Pierre, “but if you want to be my teacher...”
And he offered his thick hand, lowering it low, to the thin girl.
While the couples were settling down and the musicians were lining up, Pierre sat down with his little lady. Natasha was completely happy; she danced with a big one, with someone who came from abroad. She sat in front of everyone and talked to him like a big girl. She had a fan in her hand, which one young lady had given her to hold. And, assuming the most secular pose (God knows where and when she learned this), she, fanning herself and smiling through the fan, spoke to her gentleman.
- What is it, what is it? Look, look,” said the old countess, passing through the hall and pointing at Natasha.
Natasha blushed and laughed.
- Well, what about you, mom? Well, what kind of hunt are you looking for? What's surprising here?

In the middle of the third eco-session, the chairs in the living room, where the count and Marya Dmitrievna were playing, began to move, and most of the honored guests and old people, stretching after a long sitting and putting wallets and purses in their pockets, walked out the doors of the hall. Marya Dmitrievna walked ahead with the count - both with cheerful faces. The Count, with playful politeness, like a ballet, offered his rounded hand to Marya Dmitrievna. He straightened up, and his face lit up with a particularly brave, sly smile, and as soon as the last figure of the ecosaise was danced, he clapped his hands to the musicians and shouted to the choir, addressing the first violin:
- Semyon! Do you know Danila Kupor?
This was the count's favorite dance, danced by him in his youth. (Danilo Kupor was actually one figure of the Angles.)
“Look at dad,” Natasha shouted to the whole hall (completely forgetting that she was dancing with a big one), bending her curly head to her knees and bursting into her ringing laughter throughout the hall.
Indeed, everyone in the hall looked with a smile of joy at the cheerful old man, who, next to his dignified lady, Marya Dmitrievna, who was taller than him, rounded his arms, shaking them in time, straightened his shoulders, twisted his legs, slightly stamping his feet, and with a more and more blooming smile on his round face, he prepared the audience for what was to come. As soon as the cheerful, defiant sounds of Danila Kupor, similar to a cheerful chatterbox, were heard, all the doors of the hall were suddenly filled with men's faces on one side and women's smiling faces of servants on the other, who came out to look at the merry master.
- Father is ours! Eagle! – the nanny said loudly from one door.
The count danced well and knew it, but his lady did not know how and did not want to dance well. Her huge body stood upright with her powerful arms hanging down (she handed the reticule to the Countess); only her stern but beautiful face danced. What was expressed in the count's entire round figure, in Marya Dmitrievna was expressed only in an increasingly smiling face and a twitching nose. But if the count, becoming more and more dissatisfied, captivated the audience with the surprise of deft twists and light jumps of his soft legs, Marya Dmitrievna, with the slightest zeal in moving her shoulders or rounding her arms in turns and stamping, made no less an impression on merit, which everyone appreciated her obesity and ever-present severity. The dance became more and more animated. The counterparts could not attract attention to themselves for a minute and did not even try to do so. Everything was occupied by the count and Marya Dmitrievna. Natasha pulled the sleeves and dresses of all those present, who were already keeping their eyes on the dancers, and demanded that they look at daddy. During the intervals of the dance, the Count took a deep breath, waved and shouted to the musicians to play quickly. Quicker, quicker and quicker, faster and faster and faster, the count unfolded, now on tiptoes, now on heels, rushing around Marya Dmitrievna and, finally, turning his lady to her place, made the last step, raising his soft leg up from behind, bending his sweaty head with a smiling face and roundly waving his right hand amid the roar of applause and laughter, especially from Natasha. Both dancers stopped, panting heavily and wiping themselves with cambric handkerchiefs.
“This is how they danced in our time, ma chere,” said the count.
- Oh yes Danila Kupor! - Marya Dmitrievna said, letting out the spirit heavily and for a long time, rolling up her sleeves.

While the Rostovs were dancing the sixth anglaise in the hall to the sounds of tired musicians out of tune, and tired waiters and cooks were preparing dinner, the sixth blow struck Count Bezukhy. The doctors declared that there was no hope of recovery; the patient was given silent confession and communion; They were making preparations for the unction, and in the house there was the bustle and anxiety of expectation, common at such moments. Outside the house, behind the gates, undertakers crowded, hiding from the approaching carriages, awaiting a rich order for the count's funeral. The Commander-in-Chief of Moscow, who constantly sent adjutants to inquire about the Count’s position, that evening himself came to say goodbye to the famous Catherine’s nobleman, Count Bezukhim.
The magnificent reception room was full. Everyone stood up respectfully when the commander-in-chief, having been alone with the patient for about half an hour, came out of there, slightly returning the bows and trying as quickly as possible to pass by the gazes of doctors, clergy and relatives fixed on him. Prince Vasily, who had lost weight and turned pale during these days, saw off the commander-in-chief and quietly repeated something to him several times.
Having seen off the commander-in-chief, Prince Vasily sat down alone on a chair in the hall, crossing his legs high, resting his elbow on his knee and closing his eyes with his hand. After sitting like this for some time, he stood up and with unusually hasty steps, looking around with frightened eyes, walked through the long corridor to the back half of the house, to the eldest princess.
Those in the dimly lit room spoke in an uneven whisper to each other and fell silent each time and, with eyes full of question and expectation, looked back at the door that led to the dying man’s chambers and made a faint sound when someone came out of it or entered it.
“The human limit,” said the old man, a clergyman, to the lady who sat down next to him and naively listened to him, “the limit has been set, but you cannot pass it.”
“I’m wondering if it’s too late to perform unction?” - adding the spiritual title, the lady asked, as if she had no opinion of her own on this matter.
“It’s a great sacrament, mother,” answered the clergyman, running his hand over his bald spot, along which ran several strands of combed, half-gray hair.
-Who is this? was the commander in chief himself? - they asked at the other end of the room. - How youthful!...
- And the seventh decade! What, they say, the count won’t find out? Did you want to perform unction?
“I knew one thing: I had taken unction seven times.”
The second princess just left the patient’s room with tear-stained eyes and sat down next to Doctor Lorrain, who was sitting in a graceful pose under the portrait of Catherine, leaning his elbows on the table.
“Tres beau,” said the doctor, answering a question about the weather, “tres beau, princesse, et puis, a Moscou on se croit a la campagne.” [beautiful weather, princess, and then Moscow looks so much like a village.]
“N"est ce pas? [Isn’t that right?],” said the princess, sighing. “So can he drink?”
Lorren thought about it.
– Did he take the medicine?
- Yes.
The doctor looked at the breget.
– Take a glass of boiled water and put in une pincee (with his thin fingers he showed what une pincee means) de cremortartari... [a pinch of cremortartar...]
“Listen, I didn’t drink,” the German doctor said to the adjutant, “so that after the third blow there was nothing left.”
– What a fresh man he was! - said the adjutant. – And who will this wealth go to? – he added in a whisper.
“There will be a okotnik,” the German answered, smiling.
Everyone looked back at the door: it creaked, and the second princess, having made the drink shown by Lorren, took it to the sick man. The German doctor approached Lorren.
- Maybe it will last until tomorrow morning? - asked the German, speaking bad French.
Lorren, pursing his lips, sternly and negatively waved his finger in front of his nose.
“Tonight, not later,” he said quietly, with a decent smile of self-satisfaction in the fact that he clearly knew how to understand and express the patient’s situation, and walked away.

Meanwhile, Prince Vasily opened the door to the princess’s room.
The room was dim; only two lamps were burning in front of the images, and there was a good smell of incense and flowers. The entire room was furnished with small furniture: wardrobes, cupboards, and tables. The white covers of a high down bed could be seen from behind the screens. The dog barked.
- Oh, is it you, mon cousin?
She stood up and straightened her hair, which had always, even now, been so unusually smooth, as if it had been made from one piece with her head and covered with varnish.
- What, did something happen? – she asked. “I’m already so scared.”
- Nothing, everything is the same; “I just came to talk to you, Katish, about business,” said the prince, wearily sitting down on the chair from which she had risen. “How did you warm it up, however,” he said, “well, sit here, causons.” [let's talk.]
– I was wondering if something had happened? - said the princess and with her unchanged, stone-stern expression on her face, she sat down opposite the prince, preparing to listen.
“I wanted to sleep, mon cousin, but I can’t.”
- Well, what, my dear? - said Prince Vasily, taking the princess’s hand and bending it downwards according to his habit.
It was clear that this “well, what” referred to many things that, without naming them, they both understood.
The princess, with her incongruously long legs, lean and straight waist, looked directly and dispassionately at the prince with her bulging gray eyes. She shook her head and sighed as she looked at the images. Her gesture could be explained both as an expression of sadness and devotion, and as an expression of fatigue and hope for a quick rest. Prince Vasily explained this gesture as an expression of fatigue.
“But for me,” he said, “do you think it’s easier?” Je suis ereinte, comme un cheval de poste; [I'm as tired as a post horse;] but still I need to talk to you, Katish, and very seriously.
Prince Vasily fell silent, and his cheeks began to twitch nervously, first on one side, then on the other, giving his face an unpleasant expression that had never appeared on Prince Vasily’s face when he was in the living rooms. His eyes were also not the same as always: sometimes they looked brazenly joking, sometimes they looked around in fear.
The princess, holding the dog on her knees with her dry, thin hands, looked carefully into the eyes of Prince Vasily; but it was clear that she would not break the silence with a question, even if she had to remain silent until the morning.
“You see, my dear princess and cousin, Katerina Semyonovna,” continued Prince Vasily, apparently not without an internal struggle as he began to continue his speech, “in moments like now, you need to think about everything.” We need to think about the future, about you... I love you all like my children, you know that.
The princess looked at him just as dimly and motionlessly.
“Finally, we need to think about my family,” Prince Vasily continued, angrily pushing the table away from him and not looking at her, “you know, Katisha, that you, the three Mamontov sisters, and also my wife, we are the only direct heirs of the count.” I know, I know how hard it is for you to talk and think about such things. And it’s not easier for me; but, my friend, I’m in my sixties, I need to be prepared for anything. Do you know that I sent for Pierre, and that the count, directly pointing to his portrait, demanded him to come to him?
Prince Vasily looked questioningly at the princess, but could not understand whether she was understanding what he told her or was just looking at him...
“I never cease to pray to God for one thing, mon cousin,” she answered, “that he would have mercy on him and allow his beautiful soul to leave this world in peace...
“Yes, that’s so,” Prince Vasily continued impatiently, rubbing his bald head and again angrily pulling the table pushed aside towards him, “but finally... finally the thing is, you yourself know that last winter the count wrote a will, according to which he has the entire estate , in addition to the direct heirs and us, he gave it to Pierre.
“You never know how many wills he wrote!” – the princess said calmly. “But he couldn’t bequeath to Pierre.” Pierre is illegal.
“Ma chere,” said Prince Vasily suddenly, pressing the table to himself, perking up and starting to speak quickly, “but what if the letter was written to the sovereign, and the count asks to adopt Pierre?” You see, according to the Count’s merits, his request will be respected...
The princess smiled, the way people smile who think they know the matter more than those they are talking to.
“I’ll tell you more,” continued Prince Vasily, grabbing her hand, “the letter was written, although not sent, and the sovereign knew about it.” The only question is whether it is destroyed or not. If not, then how soon will it all be over,” Prince Vasily sighed, making it clear that he meant by the words everything will end, “and the count’s papers will be opened, the will with the letter will be handed over to the sovereign, and his request will probably be respected. Pierre, as a legitimate son, will receive everything.
– What about our unit? - asked the princess, smiling ironically, as if anything but this could happen.
- Mais, ma pauvre Catiche, c "est clair, comme le jour. [But, my dear Catiche, it is clear as day.] He alone is then the rightful heir of everything, and you will not get any of this. You should know, my dear, were the will and the letter written, and were they destroyed? And if for some reason they were forgotten, then you should know where they are and find them, because...
- This was all that was missing! – the princess interrupted him, smiling sardonically and without changing the expression of her eyes. - I am a woman; according to you, we are all stupid; but I know so well that an illegitimate son cannot inherit... Un batard, [Illegitimate,] - she added, hoping with this translation to finally show the prince his groundlessness.
- Don’t you understand, finally, Katish! You are so smart: how do you not understand - if the count wrote a letter to the sovereign in which he asks him to recognize his son as legitimate, it means that Pierre will no longer be Pierre, but Count Bezukhoy, and then he will receive everything in his will? And if the will and the letter are not destroyed, then nothing will remain for you except the consolation that you were virtuous et tout ce qui s"en suit, [and everything that follows from here]. This is true.

About the university

The birthday of the Kaliningrad Law Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia is considered to be October 15, 1953, when, on the basis of the order of the Minister of Internal Affairs of the USSR No. 00719 of August 27, a police school was created. The school initially functioned as an educational institution of a course nature without the right to issue a state diploma. Its main task was to train young personnel for the operational command of the police on the basis of seven classes. After a two-year period of study, school graduates who completed the curriculum and passed the final exams were awarded the special rank of “police lieutenant” and issued certificates.
LLCThe initial educational and material base was the building of the disbanded Kaliningrad Military Quartermaster School (Mira Avenue, 2). Before the city was captured by Soviet troops, it housed the East Prussian Land Court. By order of the Council of Ministers of the USSR No. 3452-rsot on April 23, 1955 and by order of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs No. 230 on May 5, 1955, the school was reorganized into a special secondary educational institution with a two-year period of study on the basis of a comprehensive secondary school with the right to issue graduates a state diploma of secondary legal education . The school was given the name "Kaliningrad Special Secondary School of Police of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR".
LLC In May 1958, in connection with the transfer of the Technical Institute of Fishing Industry and Economy from Moscow, the school was transferred to the building of a vocational school (Gornaya Street, 8). It was built in the period from 1928-1931. especially for the East Prussian Land Office of the German Reich Ministry of Labor. At the same time, the Land and City Labor Exchanges functioned here. The building at 43/45 Kamenny Val Street, built in the 20s of the 20th century (until 1945, served as a children's university hospital), was restored as a cadet dormitory.
LLC In accordance with the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR, the commanding staff and cadets of the school on November 2 and 9, 1962 for the first time took the Oath of the Soviet police personnel. By decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR dated October 23, 1962, on April 18, the school was awarded the Red Banner. In 1967, the educational institution was first visited by the heads of administrative bodies of the Olsztyn Voivodeship of Poland.
Over its history, the educational institution has repeatedly carried out various tasks of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. The first duty was to protect public order in Moscow in 1957 during the 6th World Festival of Youth and Students. May-June 1973, Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic - carrying out a special task code-named “Regime”. From Rostov to Azov, in July-August 1974, personnel served to protect the Don River during the threat of a cholera outbreak in this region. School personnel were involved in maintaining public order in Moscow during the 25th and 26th Congresses of the CPSU, the 19th Party Conference, the 12th World Festival of Youth and Students, celebrations dedicated to the 60th October Revolution, the 80th Olympics, the Goodwill Games, celebration of the Millennium of the Baptism of Rus'. From October 12, 1987, for a month, a combined detachment (200 cadets and 25 officers) of the educational institution served in the liquidation zone of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident. For completing this task, 6 officers were awarded orders and medals. From December 1988 to August 1989, the school’s personnel performed combat service on the border of Armenia and Azerbaijan. In the first hours after the earthquake, on December 7, 1988, in Armenia, officers and cadets arrived in the cities of Spitak and Kirovkan. They carried out rescue work and protected destroyed government institutions and residential buildings from looters.
On the basis of the Kaliningrad Special Secondary Police School, by order of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR No. 34 of May 29, 1990, the Faculty of the Higher Legal Correspondence School of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the RSFSR was formed; on the day of its formation, there was only one candidate of science among the teachers. By order of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation dated July 6, 1993, the Kaliningrad Higher School of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia was created. In May 1997, the school successfully passed State certification. By Order of the Government of the Russian Federation No. 80-r dated January 24, 1998, by Order of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation No. 89 of February 5, 1998, the educational institution was renamed the Kaliningrad Law Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. That year, the institute already employed 8 doctors of science, 52 candidates of science, and 51 associate professors.

After the Great Patriotic War, a situation arose with a catastrophic shortage of real specialists...

The Institute of the Northern Capital is the only institution of its kind in the entire region where future employees of the Ministry of Internal Affairs are trained. Throughout its history, the institution has passed a difficult road, the beginning of which was the police school, and the end - the modern institute of jurisprudence of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation.

After the Great Patriotic War, a situation arose with a catastrophic shortage of real specialists in their field. That is why the subordinate bodies established a police institution that trains young servants of the law.

The beginning of educational activities dates back to October 1953, when the institute's day is celebrated annually. From its inception, police school was positioned as a course that did not require a diploma. Cadets who completed 7 years of high school were sent to a specialized police force for two years, after passing the final exams in which they were issued a special certificate and the rank of lieutenant.

In the late nineties, when the mandatory state certification procedure was taking place throughout the country, the school was finally transformed into the Law Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation.

Throughout its history, the institution has graduated more than 17,000 competent specialists for their further service in internal affairs bodies and other organizations. For more than fifty years, graduates of the institution have been keeping the peace of the state, valiantly fighting crime and leading departments of Russian institutions and bodies abroad. Famous scientists, politicians and athletes once came out from under the wing of the institute.

Many dissertations, textbooks, monographs and training manuals were published by professors of the institute, and the results of their scientific activities are already being fully implemented in the work of law enforcement agencies. Students and cadets of the institute are trained in two main areas of training: preliminary investigation and operational search. It is important that the theoretical basis does not take up all of the students’ time, but leaves a lot of time for practical skills development. Starting from the second year, cadets undergo adaptation to their further service in the internal affairs department.

The library of the educational institution, equipped with a reading room for 80 seats, includes more than 90,000 various textbooks and 22,000 specialized literature. In addition, on the territory of the institute there is a convenient sports complex where future police officers undergo professional training and practice their sports skills.


Specialties (based on secondary (complete) general education or secondary vocational education):

  • "Legal support of national security"
  • "Law Enforcement"

Duration of training: 5 yearsFull-time form of education

Duration of study: 6 years Form of study: part-time
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Kaliningrad Branch of St. Petersburg University of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
(KF SPbU Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation) Kaliningrad secondary special police school of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR
Kaliningrad secondary special police school of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR 1953
Year of foundation Federal State Educational Institution of Higher Professional Education
Federal State Educational Institution of Higher Professional Education Chief Police Colonel S.V. Veklenko
Chief Police Colonel S.V. Veklenko
Location 236006, Kaliningrad,
Moskovsky pr., 8
Moskovsky pr., 8 klif.univer.mvd.ru

(G) (I) K:Educational institutions founded in 1953

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    - federal state educational institution of higher professional education. The founder of the university is the Government of the Russian Federation. The powers of the founder on behalf of the government are exercised by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. The Institute is an independent institution of internal affairs bodies, directly subordinate to the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. The procedure for serving institute employees with special ranks of enlisted and commanding personnel, cadets, students and adjuncts is regulated by the Law of the Russian Federation “On Police”, the Regulations on Service in the Internal Affairs Directorate of the Russian Federation and the Charter of the Institute.

    The educational process is organized in full-time and part-time forms of study. Boys and girls under the age of 25 with complete secondary or secondary vocational education are accepted for full-time study. They are enrolled in the staff of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, take the Oath, have the right to wear uniforms, enjoy all the rights of a police officer and perform the duties provided for by the Federal Law “On the Police” and the Regulations on Service in Internal Affairs Bodies. Upon completion of training, graduates are awarded the special rank of police lieutenant and awarded a diploma of higher legal education.

    Employees of internal affairs bodies under the age of 35 are accepted for correspondence courses. For those who have completed secondary general or secondary vocational education, the period of study is 6 years.

    The university has a faculty for training specialists on a paid basis. Training is conducted in the specialty “Jurisprudence” - 5 years full-time and 6 part-time. Upon completion of their studies at the faculty, students receive state-issued diplomas of higher legal education.

    Kaliningrad legal
    Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia
    (Klui)
    (KF SPbU Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation)

    Former names

    Kaliningrad secondary special police school of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the USSR
    Year of foundation

    Type

    Federal State Educational Institution of Higher Professional Education

    Acting Head Luksha A.E.

    Chief Police Colonel S.V. Veklenko
    Location

    236006, Kaliningrad,
    Moskovsky pr., 8

    Moskovsky pr., 8

    Kaliningrad Law Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia- federal state educational institution of higher professional education. The founder of the university is the Government of the Russian Federation. The powers of the founder on behalf of the government are exercised by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. The Institute is an independent institution of internal affairs bodies, directly subordinate to the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. The procedure for serving institute employees with special ranks of enlisted and commanding personnel, cadets, students and adjuncts is regulated by the Law of the Russian Federation “On the Police”, the Regulations on Service in the Internal Affairs Directorate of the Russian Federation and the Charter of the Institute.

    Kaliningrad Law University of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia

    The Institute trains specialists for Russian internal affairs bodies, as well as trains students on a paid contractual basis. Graduates are issued a state-issued diploma of appropriate education. As a higher educational institution, the institute is certified and accredited for educational programs by the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation for a period until July 4, 2012. The institute implements programs of secondary, higher, postgraduate and additional professional education in accordance with the license for the right to conduct activities in the field of education dated April 26, 2007 in the specialties “Law Enforcement” and “Jurisprudence”. In addition, the university provides professional retraining and advanced training for employees of internal affairs bodies in the field of the institute and pre-university training.

    The educational process is organized in full-time and part-time forms of study. Boys and girls under the age of 25 with complete secondary or secondary vocational education are accepted for full-time study. They are enrolled in the staff of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, take the Oath, have the right to wear uniforms, enjoy all the rights of a police officer and perform the duties provided for by the Federal Law “On the Police” and the Regulations on Service in the Internal Affairs Bodies. Upon completion of training, graduates are awarded the special rank of police lieutenant and awarded a diploma of higher legal education.

    Employees of internal affairs bodies under the age of 35 are accepted for correspondence courses. For those who have completed secondary general or secondary vocational education, the period of study is 6 years.

    The university has a faculty for training specialists on a paid basis. Training is conducted in the specialty “Jurisprudence” - 5 years full-time and 6 part-time. Upon completion of their studies at the faculty, students receive state-issued diplomas of higher legal education.

    Story

    By order of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs of August 27, 1953, the Kaliningrad Police School was created. On October 15 of the same year, classes began there. Initially, the school was located in the very center of the city, in one of the buildings of the building complex near Victory Square. Since 1949, this building has housed the military quartermaster school of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs. After its disbandment, a police school was created on its basis. Most of the school's personnel were transferred to the staff of the new educational institution. In addition, part of the teaching staff was sent for permanent work to Kaliningrad from Stalinabad, Tallinn, Tashkent and other police schools. The most experienced and trained employees of the operational units of the Directorate of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Kaliningrad Region also served in the KVS as cycle managers and teachers.

    The first head of the educational institution was Lieutenant Colonel Anatoly Semenovich Slonetsky, who previously worked as deputy head of the regional police department. For two years he headed the school, which by the time he moved to another job, had increased its status. In 1955, it was reorganized into a special secondary educational institution with a two-year period of study, giving it the right to issue diplomas of secondary legal education to its graduates. Anatoly Slonetsky was deputy head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Uzbek SSR for nine years, and then headed the Internal Affairs Directorate of the Novosibirsk Region for 13 years. Retired with the rank of major general of police.

    In the summer of 1955, the first graduation took place at the educational institution. And in the same year, Anatoly Slonetsky was replaced as head by Anatoly Evstigneevich Zinchenko, who had worked since the formation of the educational institution as deputy head for academic work. He was an extraordinary personality and with his tireless work he gained enormous authority among the personnel of the internal affairs bodies and the public of the region. Therefore, his sudden death in front of the entire staff of the educational institution - during a report at a ceremonial meeting on April 17, 1970 - shocked everyone.

    Under the leadership of Anatoly Zinchenko, the police school experienced many important events in its history. In 1958, the educational institution was transferred to a new location, located in the complex of buildings of the former German labor exchange, which it occupies to this day. For several years, in parallel with the educational process, large restoration and reconstruction work was going on here, mainly carried out by cadets and school staff. In 1962, the commanding staff and cadets of the educational institution for the first time took the Oath of the Soviet police personnel. In 1964, the school was awarded the Red Banner.

    From 1970 to 1976, the educational institution was headed by Vasily Akimovich Cheprasov. After police school, he worked for 12 years as deputy head of the Kaliningrad Regional Internal Affairs Directorate for Personnel. Now he is a retired colonel of the internal service. Honored Worker of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

    For ten years - until 1986 - the head of the police school was Ivan Andreevich Popov. He served in the educational institution from the day of its formation, in combat and teaching work. For the participation of school personnel in ensuring public order in Moscow during the 1980 Summer Olympics, he was awarded the Order of Friendship of Peoples. An honored worker of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, a retired police colonel, he died in 1993 after a serious illness.

    From 1986 to 1990, the head of first the police school, and then the faculty of the Higher Legal Correspondence School of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation, created on its basis, was Andrei Fedorovich Dunaev. He went down in the history of the Russian police as one of the top leaders of the Ministry of Internal Affairs during the collapse of the USSR and the creation of the independent state of the Russian Federation. In 1990-1991 - Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs of the RSFSR, from September to December 1991 - Minister of Internal Affairs, in 1992-1993 - First Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation. Honored Worker of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. Lieutenant General of Police. Currently retired.

    In 1993, the educational institution received the status of an independent university, being transformed into the Kaliningrad Higher School of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. And in 1998, after successfully passing the state certification, the KVSH was renamed the Kaliningrad Law Institute of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. These most important events in the history of the university are associated with the name of another of its leaders - Police Major General Vladimir Leonidovich Popov. Doctor of Law, Professor, Honored Lawyer of Russia, Honored Worker of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, he headed the institute until 2005. Currently retired.

    There were many bright events in the biography of the educational institution. More than once its personnel had the opportunity to perform tasks of national importance.

    The first test of the police school's readiness to work in emergency conditions was service in Moscow during the 6th World Festival of Youth and Students there in 1957. A combined detachment of eight officers and 260 cadets assisted the Moscow police at the most important festival sites. The Kaliningraders successfully completed all the tasks. Just like later, in 1985, when the 12th World Festival of Youth and Students was held in Moscow. In both cases, the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs expressed gratitude to the staff of the police school for professionally ensuring public order and security.

    The officers and cadets of the educational institution showed an exemplary attitude towards service when they took part in the operation code-named “Regime” in the Chechen-Ingush Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in 1973. It was carried out to restore constitutional order in this North Caucasian republic, engulfed in mass unrest. In very difficult conditions, sometimes in hard-to-reach areas, passport control and employment checks were carried out, and searches were carried out for wanted criminals and illegally stored weapons.

    In the summer of 1974, a police school detachment - two officers and 150 cadets - served in the area of ​​the Don River during the threat of an outbreak of a cholera epidemic and quarantine measures there.

    Repeatedly, the personnel of the educational institution were involved in ensuring law and order in Moscow during the most important state socio-political forums. In 1976, two hundred officers and cadets served at the facilities of the capital's transport complex during the 25th Party Congress. Police school squads and patrols were displayed at airports and railway stations. Kaliningrad residents managed to solve several crimes, stop dozens of offenses, and detain hundreds of violators of public order.

    Representatives of the Kaliningrad police school worked no less effectively five years later, in 1981, when the next congress was held in Moscow. The combined battalion then consisted of 20 officers and 183 cadets.

    The Olympic trip remained a bright page in the annals of special missions of the police school. During the 22nd Summer Olympics in Moscow in 1980, on behalf of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, a battalion consisting of 29 officers and 341 cadets kept order at Sheremetyevo-1 and Sheremetyevo-2 airports. During their service, with their help, several crimes were solved and prevented, including an attempt to illegally acquire weapons, and about four hundred law enforcement violators were detained. In addition, over five thousand pieces of luggage lost by guests and participants of the Games were discovered and returned to their owners. Among the Kaliningrad residents, as a result of that business trip, eight people were awarded government awards, 26 were encouraged by the Minister of Internal Affairs. And six years later, in 1986, the combined detachment of the police school once again had the opportunity to serve in law enforcement during world-class sports competitions - in Moscow during the Goodwill Games.

    In 1987, the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs decided to provide assistance to the Belarusian police in ensuring the safety and security of the area liquidating the consequences of the man-made disaster at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. The personnel of the Kaliningrad police school were among the first who were sent to carry out this decision. The combined battalion included two hundred people: 27 officers, three junior officers, 168 cadets, as well as two civilian medical personnel. The battalion consisted of two detachments, which were headed by the deputy head of the school for the educational part - Vladimir Grigorievich Kitchenko and for the combat part - Nikolai Andreevich Alekhanov. The general management of the battalion was carried out by the head of the school, Police Major General Andrei Fedorovich Dunaev, and his deputy for administrative and economic matters, Vladimir Leonidovich Popov. The battalion was stationed for a month in the Gomel region in close proximity to the damaged nuclear power plant. Police school patrols guarded the areas of the exclusion zone assigned to them to prevent people from entering there and looting abandoned houses. They detained more than two dozen people on suspicion of committing looting and other crimes.

    The year 1988 significantly expanded the chronicle of special assignments of the educational institution. In the summer, its personnel served in Moscow during the celebration of the 1000th anniversary of the Baptism of Rus', the 19th All-Union Party Conference and the visit of US President Ronald Reagan. And in the winter, on the orders of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, he went to the Caucasus, where a conflict broke out between Armenians and Azerbaijanis. Blood was shed on both sides of this ethnic confrontation. To ensure security, units from many regions of the Soviet Union were sent to the border between the two republics. The battalion of the Kaliningrad Police School, consisting of 225 people, also took part in this operation. And it was they who were the first to come to the aid of the residents of the Armenian cities of Kirovakan and Spitak, destroyed by a powerful earthquake on December 7, 1988. The Kaliningrad battalion was stationed closest to the epicenter, and within three hours after the disaster struck, the personnel went to the site of the tragedy. In the affected cities, within 24 hours before the arrival of professional rescuers and special equipment, officers and cadets, using improvised means, cleared the rubble in search of the people under them. 89 people were rescued from the ruins, including 16 alive. In addition, Kaliningrad residents helped the homeless and wounded, and also donated 36 liters of donor blood.

    Institute management

    • The head of the institute is Sergey Vladimirovich Veklenko, police colonel, head of the institute, Doctor of Law, professor.
    • Deputy Head of the Institute for Academic Affairs - Kutuev Eldar Kyarimovich, police colonel, Doctor of Law, professor.
    • Deputy Head of the Institute for Work with Personnel - Andrey Yuryevich Klimov, Doctor of Historical Sciences, Associate Professor.
    • Deputy head of the institute for service and combat training - Aleksey Vladimirovich Chugunov.
    • Assistant to the head of the institute for logistics, head of the logistics department - Nazarov Alexander Vyacheslavovich, police lieutenant colonel.
    • The chief specialist in working with veterans is Vladimir Nikolaevich Arkhipov, retired police colonel.
    • The head of the faculty of training specialists on a paid basis is Sergey Grigorievich Lapikov.
    • Assistant to the head of the institute for legal work - Olga Valerievna Sokolova, police colonel, candidate of legal sciences, associate professor.