Federal prosecution office reports severe staffing constraints affecting ability to pursue serious criminal cases, calling for immediate resource expansion

"Due to the shortage of resources at the Federal Office of Police, preliminary investigations cannot be conducted intensively enough in some cases or have to be postponed."
"In order to guarantee Switzerlandâs internal security in the future, the OAG is dependent on sufficient investigators."
Switzerlandâs internal security apparatus is blinking red. The Office of the Attorney General (OAG) has issued a stark ultimatum, warning that an unresolved and critical shortage of investigators is now actively hindering the prosecution of serious criminals. This is not merely an administrative bottleneck; it is a direct threat to the rule of law. The OAG explicitly states that to guarantee the nation's future security, the current staffing levels are dangerously insufficient.
The situation has deteriorated to the point where the Federal Office of Police (Fedpol) lacks the resources to conduct preliminary investigations with the necessary intensity. In a startling admission of vulnerability, authorities revealed that vital investigative work is being forced into postponement. The message is unequivocal: without an immediate injection of resources, the federal government's ability to police its own borders and protect its citizens is being compromised.
While resources dwindle, the threat landscape is exploding. In 2024 alone, federal prosecutors grappled with a staggering 120 criminal terrorism proceedings. This number represents a relentless pressure on a system already stretched to its absolute limit. The OAG is fighting a war on multiple fronts, confronting complex terror networks while simultaneously attempting to police sophisticated white-collar crime.
To combat the rising tide of financial malfeasance, the OAG is demanding more effective legal instruments, but tools are useless without the hands to wield them. The disparity between the volume of high-stakes cases and the available personnel is growing wider by the day. Prosecutors are working at capacity, but the sheer volume of terrorism-related inquiries demands a level of attention that the current workforce simply cannot sustain without compromising other critical areas of justice.
The most alarming consequence of this shortage is not just delay, but total inaction. In a shocking revelation, the OAG admitted that it sometimes has to refrain from opening proceedings entirely. This means potential crimes are going uninvestigated and unpunished solely because there is no one left to do the work. Justice is not just being delayed; in these instances, it is being abandoned.
"Preliminary investigations cannot be conducted intensively enough," the OAG stated, highlighting a systemic failure that allows criminal elements to exploit the gaps in Swiss enforcement. When federal prosecutors are forced to triage justice, prioritizing only the most catastrophic threats while letting others slide, the integrity of the Swiss legal system is called into question. The shortage at Fedpol is acting as a bottleneck that chokes the entire judicial process from the start.
This crisis did not emerge overnight; the warning lights have been flashing for months. Just this past January, Nicoletta della Valle, the outgoing director of Fedpol, issued a prophetic warning about funding cuts and insufficient resources for officers and prosecutors. Her concerns have now materialized into a tangible operational crisis. The OAG is now calling for a "moderate but steady" increase in police officers over the next few years to stem the bleeding.
The path forward is clear, but it requires political will. The federal government must pivot from austerity to investment if it intends to maintain the high standards of safety and order that Switzerland is renowned for. Ignoring these warnings is no longer an optionâthe OAG has made it clear that the safety of the nation depends on a rapid and sustained expansion of its investigative force.