CITF-FM is a French-language Canadian radio station located in Quebec City, Quebec.
Owned and operated by Bell Media, it broadcasts on 107.5 MHz with an effective radiated power of 37,000 watts (class C1) using an omnidirectional antenna. The station's transmitter is located at Mount Bélair.
The station has an adult contemporary format since 1990 and is part of the Rouge FM network which operates across Quebec and Eastern Ontario.
CITF-FM started operations on July 22, 1982 as a sister station to the now-defunct CKCV 1280 with a beautiful music format. The latter closed in September 1990, as part of a failed attempt of Telemedia (then owner of both stations) to buy CHRC 800, as at the time owners were limited to only one AM station and one FM station per market. (Even though the purchase of CKCV was denied by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), that station remained dark.)
Up until 1990, CITF-FM had a beautiful music format. The station switched to adult contemporary music in 1990 and the station was renamed "CITF Rock-Détente".
A CITF form 40 is the form the United States' military's Criminal Investigation Task Force (CITF) uses to record "investigative activity", including interviews with suspects. A memo to all personnel of the CITF, dated 16 December 2002, intended to lay out the procedures for interrogating captive apprehended in the war on terror, stated:
CITF may refer to: