Federal Criminal Police Office (Germany)

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Federal Criminal Police Office
Bundeskriminalamt
Abbreviation BKA
250px
Main logo of the BKA
Agency overview
Formed 15 March 1951 (73 years ago) (1951-03-15)
Preceding agency Criminal Police Office for the British Zone
Employees 5,200
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Federal agency
(Operations jurisdiction)
Germany
Legal jurisdiction As per operations jurisdiction.
Constituting instrument Law on the Establishment of the Federal Criminal Police Office (German: BKA-Gesetz)
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters Wiesbaden
Agency executive Holger Münch, President
Divisions
9
  • International Coordination (IK)
  • State Security (ST)
  • Serious and Organized Crime (SO)
  • Protection Division (SG)
  • Central CID Services (ZD)
  • Institute of Law Enforcement Studies and Training (KI)
  • Forensic Science Institute (KT)
Website
http://www.bka.de
Footnotes
Reference for infobox data[1]

The Federal Criminal Police Office of Germany (in German: Audio file "De-Bundeskriminalamt.ogg" not found, abbreviated Audio file "De-BKA.ogg" not found) is the federal investigative police agency of Germany, directly subordinated to the Federal Ministry of the Interior.[2] It is headquartered in Wiesbaden, Hesse, and maintains major branch offices in Berlin and Meckenheim near Bonn. It is headed by Holger Münch since Dec 2014.

Primary jurisdiction of the agency includes coordinating cooperation between the federation and state police forces; investigating cases of international organized crime, terrorism and other cases related to national security; counterterrorism; the protection of members of the constitutional institutions, and of federal witnesses. When requested by the respective state authorities or the federal minister of the interior, it also assumes responsibility for investigations in certain large-scale cases. Furthermore, the Attorney General of Germany can direct it to investigate cases of special public interest.[3]

History

The Federal Criminal Police Office was founded in Germany in 1951.

Missions

The BKA's missions include:

  • Coordinating cooperation between the federation and state police forces (especially state criminal investigation authorities) and with foreign investigative authorities.
  • Collecting and analyzing criminal intelligence, managing the de (INPOL) database of all important crimes and criminals.
  • Investigating cases of terrorism or other areas of political motivated crime, as well as narcotics, weapons and financial/economical crime.
  • Protection of federal witnesses.
  • Acting as a clearing house for identifying and cataloging images and information on victims of child sexual exploitation, similar to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children in the United States.[3]

The BKA provides assistance to the states in forensic matters, research and organized crime investigations. It is Germany's national central bureau for the European Police Office (Europol), International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol), Schengen Information System, and the German criminal Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS).

The DVI-Team (in German: Identifizierungskommission or more common IDKO) is an event driven organisation of mainly forensic specialists dedicated to identification of disaster victims. The DVI's past missions include several airplane crashes, the Eschede train disaster and the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake.

The Close Protection Group protects the members of Germany's constitutional bodies and their foreign guests of state and is often the most visible part of the BKA. Specially selected and trained officers with special equipment and vehicles provide round-the-clock personal security to those they protect. The Protection Group is now headquartered in Berlin.

Approximately 5,200 BKA personnel operate nationwide and (e.g. as liaison officers) in 60 countries around the globe.[1]

Directors

  • Dr. Max Hagemann (1951–1952)
  • Dr. Hanns Jess (1952–1955)
  • Reinhard Dullien (1955–1964)
  • Paul Dickopf (1965–1971)
  • Horst Herold (1971 – March 1981)
  • Heinrich Boge (March 1981 – 1990)
  • Hans-Ludwig Zachert (1990 – April 1996)
  • Klaus Ulrich Kersten (April 1996 – February 26, 2004)
  • Jörg Ziercke (February 26, 2004 - December 2014)
  • Holger Münch (since 1st December 2014)

Images

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
  2. http://polis.osce.org/countries/details.php?item_id=17#Country_Profile_Section_213
  3. 3.0 3.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links

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