American Investigation Agency (Socialist America)

The American Investigation Agency is an American government-owned entity, one of the few organisations owned by the government, rather than those working within it. It is divided into two sections, the Local Division (LD) and the International Division (ID).

History
The AIA, often referred to as simply the Agency, was formed on July 26, 1907, by People's Attorney Theodore Roosevelt, on the advice of President Charles Bonaparte, as a means for the government to investigate those matters that transcended state boundaries and jurisdiction. It's first director was Alexei Bielaski, who hotly denied any existence of organised crime in America, and only ever investigated individual criminals. Upon being assassinated in 1919, he was replaced by George Wickersham. Perhaps the Agency's most famous director, however, was Alphonse 'Scarface' Capone, director from 1929-70, who managed to bust over 30 statewide smuggling operations during the Marijuana and Alcohol Prohibition period, as well as numerous smaller ones. In 1943, following the Second Great War, President Franklin D. Roosevelt created the International Division, responsible for obtaining information about foreign entities deemed important, and reporting appropriate information to branches of the US Government.

List of Directors
Alexei B. Bielaski (1907-1919) George Wickersham (1919-1929) Alphonse Capone (1929-1970) Johnathon Gotti (1970-1984) Dorothy Bush-Kerry (1984-2002) William Ribicoff, Jr. (2002-present)