Queensland's crime and corruption watchdog charged two police for using excessive force last financial year and is still investigating another 13 allegations of brutality.
The Crime and Corruption Commission's 2015-16 annual report, tabled in Parliament on Friday, also shows it received 2674 complaints of corrupt conduct involving 6736 separate allegations.
Of those, 64 per cent related to police, with the remainder associated with the public sector including local government.
The excessive use of force by Queensland police officers was a key focus of the CCC last financial year, with chairman Alan MacSporran QC announcing measures in September to increase the watchdog's oversight of allegations.
Of 40 allegations of excessive force probed, two had resulted in criminal charges, another 13 were under investigation and 24 cases were referred back to or dealt with by the Queensland Police Service.
The cases included an officer who allegedly gouged a female prisoner's eye and cut the webbing between her fingers, and an officer charged with assaulting a female child at a residential care facility.
The watchdog is also monitoring another 44 excessive-force allegations being investigated by police.
Cold Call investment scams were also a major focus of the CCC last financial year, with hearings into 11 of the syndicates revealing five had direct links with organised-crime identities or bikie gangs.
Another key area was ice trafficking, 19 people being charged with 234 offences.
The watchdog seized $1.59 million worth of drugs and had $10.01m in assets forfeited to the state, according to the report.
Overall the CCC finalised 116 investigations last financial year, resulting in 92 people being charged with more than 750 separate criminal offences.
The misuse of confidential information was one of the most common types of complaints, with 17 investigations leading to 86 criminal charges.
AAP