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  2. Law enforcement in Mexico City - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_enforcement_in_Mexico_City

    Law enforcement in Mexico City is provided by two primary agencies; the Secretariat of Citizen Security of Mexico City (Secretaría de Seguridad Ciudadana de la ciudad de México), who provide uniformed or preventative police, and the Office of the Attorney General of Mexico City (Fiscalía General de Justicia de la Ciudad de México) who provide plainclothes detectives and crime lab ser

  3. La Perla, San Juan, Puerto Rico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../La_Perla,_San_Juan,_Puerto_Rico

    La Perla is a historical shanty town astride the northern historic city wall of Old San Juan, Puerto Rico, stretching about 650 yards (600 m) along the rocky Atlantic coast immediately east of the Santa Maria Magdalena de Pazzis Cemetery and down the slope from (north of) Calle Norzagaray. La Perla was established in

  4. List of government-owned corporations of Puerto Rico

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_government-owned...

    Autoridad para el Financiamiento de la Infraestructura de Puerto Rico: AFI: Banking: Caño Martín Peña ENLACE Project Corporation: ENLACE: Corporación del Proyecto ENLACE del Caño Martín Peña: ENLACE: Real estate: Cardiovascular Center of Puerto Rico and the Caribbean Corporation: CCPRCC: Corporación del Centro Cardiovascular de Puerto ...

  5. La Perla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Perla

    La perla may refer to: La Perla District, Peru; La Perla, Veracruz, Mexico; La Perla, San Juan, Puerto Rico, area of Old San Juan in Puerto Rico Teatro La Perla, Ponce, Puerto Rico; La Perla Spa, a building in Mar del Plata, Argentina; La Perla, a former detention center in Córdoba, Argentina; La perla, a Mexican film of Steinbeck's novel The ...

  6. La Perla del Sur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Perla_del_Sur

    La Perla del Sur is a weekly online Spanish-language newspaper based in Ponce, Puerto Rico, catering to a regional [7] audience. It started as a printed paper distributed in nine towns in southern Puerto Rico and had a circulation of 75,000. It also had an Internet portal where the entire printed version of the paper could be accessed.

  7. Puerto Rico Office for Socioeconomic and Community ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puerto_Rico_Office_for...

    Law 1-2001, passed on March 1, 2001 created the Oficina del Coordinador General para el Financiamiento Social y la Autogestión (OFSA), with a mission to eradicate poverty in Puerto Rico. With it, "Special Communities" ( Comunidades Especiales de Puerto Rico ) across Puerto Rico were to be identified and then residents' voices were to be ...

  8. Municipalities of Puerto Rico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Municipalities_of_Puerto_Rico

    Demographically, municipalities in Puerto Rico are equivalent to counties in the United States, and Puerto Rican municipalities are registered as county subdivisions in the United States census. [2] Statistically, the municipality with the largest number of inhabitants is San Juan , with 342,259, while Culebra is the smallest, with around 1,792.

  9. List of communities in Puerto Rico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_communities_in...

    In Puerto Rico, there are 78 municipalities and 902 municipio subdivisions made up of 827 barrios and 75 barrios-pueblo. [ a ] There are also a number of subbarrios and communities. The following is a list of the 902 barrios, some of the subbarrios, including the 40 subbarrios of Santurce, which is a barrio of San Juan and a few communities ...