Suyogv wrote:During pre-independence era it was one of the best place to work.
If I am not mistaken during the Pre-Independence era the Intelligence wing was generally refered to as the "Bombay CID". And to speak of their efficiency. When Nathuram Godse, Gopal Godse etc. formed the Hindu Maha Sabha in Pune, their inauguration ceremony and speeches were getting monitored

. A CID man was right there on the first floor of an adjacent building, and he promptly reported of the formation of a hard-line organisation.
ASPaur wrote:I suppose it is the task of a good intel officer to be able to discern the wheat from the chaff.
My feeling is that police intelligence is faulty because it does not have specialists. It is very rarely I have seen policemen who were in the special branch during their entire service period. Police officers are more like "generalists", today he is asked to do law and order duties, and the next day he is put as a Traffic Sub-Inspector else where. And when a promotion comes he may move to a Crime Branch or a Special Branch unit. Yes he would be picking up the experiences for these tasks all through the way, but then he lacks specialisation. I have seen policemen who opt for the special branch kind of work, not because of interest, but the task is more routine and not cumbersome. They also can keep away from the lime light.
How ever I don't think all is lost here. Special Branch for many police forces is the first step to get a deputation to IB. In my town there were some officers who were ruthless in law and order duties (do not hesitate in thrashing a person to pulp) but also good experts in cracking crimes. Their names to use appear daily in news papers etc. Soon they get moved to the Special Branch where they are out of lime light and quitely they get moved to Intelligence Bureau on deputation. After a sojourn of around two years, I have seen them coming back on a higher rank and gets posted to certain sensitive postings (Airport Immigration and security is one of them).