The Secretariat planned and conducted its activities according to the objectives, strategies, priorities, National Development Plans, and the National Program issued by the Head of the Federal Executive. According to Article 30a of the Organic Law of the Federal Civil Service,7 it had an office with the following main functions: developing security policies and proposing public policy on crime at the federal level, including rules, instruments, and actions to effectively prevent the commission of crimes, proposing Federal Executive measures to ensure consistent policies between the criminal divisions of the federal public service, chairing the National Council for Public Security at the Council of National Security, policies, actions, and strategies of coordination in the field of crime prevention and criminal justice policy for the entire national territory, dealing expeditiously with complaints and citizens' complaints regarding the exercise of its powers, organizing, managing, administering, and monitoring the PFP, and ensuring the honest performance of its staff and implementing its disciplinary system, safeguarding the integrity and heritage of the people, preventing the commission of federal crimes, and preserving freedom, order, and public peace, establishing a system to collect, analyze, examine, and process information for the prevention of crime, using methods that ensure strict adherence to human rights and running the penalties for federal crimes and administering the federal prison system, as well as organizing and conducting activities to support those that have been released.
For the study, planning, and dispatching of matters within its competence, the Secretariat was composed of the following administrative units and bodies:
Organic Law of the Federal Public Administration, Article 26 /wiki/Organic_Law_of_the_Federal_Public_Administration ↩
"About the SSP." Secretariat of Public Security. Retrieved on December 12, 2010. "Ave.Constituyentes No. 947 floor, Col. Belén de las Flores, Del. Álvaro Obregón, C.P. 01110, Mexico, D.F." http://www.ssp.gob.mx/portalWebApp/appmanager/portal/desk?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=portals_portal_page_m2p1p2&content_id=818749&folderNode=818721&language=EN ↩
Peña Nieto Announces Public Security Reforms. McCleskey, Claire O'Neill. InSightCrime.org. Retrieved November 29, 2012. http://www.insightcrime.org/news-briefs/pena-nieto-public-security-reforms ↩
"Mañana, R.I.P "oficial" a la SSP". Animal Político. January 2, 2013. Retrieved August 2, 2019. https://www.animalpolitico.com/2013/01/manana-r-i-p-oficial-a-la-ssp/ ↩
Davis, Jack (3 January 2013). "Mexico Formally Dissolves Public Security Ministry". InSight Crime. Retrieved 4 January 2013. http://www.insightcrime.org/news-briefs/mexico-formally-dissolves-public-security-ministry ↩
"Ley Orgánica de la Administración Pública Federal". www.funcionpublica.gob.mx. Archived from the original on 26 August 2011. Retrieved 12 January 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20110826002207/http://www.funcionpublica.gob.mx/leyes/loapf2000.htm ↩