Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Bureau of Criminal Investigation
| Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation | |
|---|---|
![]() DCI Seal | |
| Agency overview | |
| Formed | 9 April 1921[1] |
| Preceding agency |
|
| Jurisdictional structure | |
| Operations jurisdiction | Iowa, U.S. |
| Operational structure | |
| Headquarters | Des Moines, Iowa |
| Special Agents | 114 (2020)[2] |
| Civilians | 102 (2020)[2] |
| Parent agency | Iowa Department of Public Safety |
| Website | |
| dps | |
The Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation (colloquially known as DCI) is the state bureau of investigation for the U.S. state of Iowa. DCI provides investigative support and expertise to law enforcement and public safety agencies operating within Iowa and collaborates with local, state, and federal authorities in the investigation of a variety of criminal activities.

The DCI was originally founded as the Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI) in 1921 under the direction of state attorney general Ben Gibson. The BCI consolidated all state law enforcement officers who were appointed by the Governor and the Attorney General into one centralized agency.
Organization
The DCI is a component of the Iowa Department of Public Safety.
Bureaus
The main components and associated sub-components[3] of the Division are:
- Field Operations Bureau
- Support Operations Bureau
- Automated Biometric Identification System (Fingerprint Identification) Unit
- Administrative Support and Transcription Unit
- Records and Identification Unit
- Dissemination (Criminal history repository) Unit
- Missing Persons and Unidentified Bodies Unit
- Special Enforcement Operations Bureau
- Criminalistics Laboratory
- Arson Section
- Breath Alcohol Section
- Crime Scene Unit
- DNA Casework Unit
- DNA Profiling Convicted Offender Unit
- Drug Identification Unit
- Evidence Storage Unit
- Firearms and Toolmarks Unit
- Latent Print and Impression Evidence Unit
- Photography Unit
- Quality Assurance and Accreditation Unit
- Questioned Documents Unit
- Toxicology Unit
- Trace Evidence Unit
Offices
For purposes of field operations, DCI separates the state into four geographic zones, each of which has a staff of special agents and professional support personnel led by a special agent-in-charge.[4] These offices are often co-located with local offices of the Iowa State Patrol.
The Special Enforcement Operations Bureau has special agent offices within each of the registered and licensed casinos in the state.[5]

