Police commissioner
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Police commissioner (also known as the commissioner of police) is a senior rank in many police forces.
Rank insignia of police commissioner
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Romanian Police -
United States Police
Duties and functions
The holder is usually an experienced police officer, though some are politically appointed and may or may not actually be a professional officer. In such a case, there is usually a professional chief of police in charge of day-to-day operations. In either event, the commissioner is the designated head of the organization.
In police services of the UK, Commonwealth and USA, the title of commissioner typically designates the head of an entire police force.
A police commissioner should not be confused with a police commissary. In France, Spain and some Latin American countries "commissary" denotes the head of a single police station (analogous to a chief superintendent in UK and Commonwealth countries). However titles such as commissaire in French and comisario in Spanish can mean either commissioner or commissary in English, depending on the context.
Police commissioner by country
Australia
The Australian Federal Police and the autonomous Australian state and territory police forces are each presided over by a commissioner, who is accountable to constituents through a minister of state. The state of Victoria at one time (during the 19th-century Gold Rush) appointed commissioners for both the metropolitan area and the goldfields. Outranking both was a "chief commissioner"—a title which has survived the disappearance of the earlier junior commissioners. In Victoria, as elsewhere, the second-highest rank is deputy commissioner.
The insignia of rank worn by a commissioner in the Australian Federal Police and the New South Wales Police Force is a crown over a star and crossed and wreathed tipstaves, similar to the insignia of a military full general. In all other civilian forces, the insignia is a crown over crossed and wreathed tipstaves, similar to the insignia of a military lieutenant-general.
Canada
In Canada, the highest-ranking officer of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and of the Ontario Provincial Police holds the rank of commissioner. In the province of Alberta, the Police Act requires the municipality to appoint police commissioners that are required to provide public oversight of the police. In Alberta's capital city, Edmonton, there are nine commissioners, including two city councillors and seven city-appointed members, the object being to "provide civilian oversight for the police service".[1] The commissioners appoint and oversee a chief of police, to whom is delegated the day-to-day management of the force.[2]
Hong Kong
The head of the Hong Kong Police (Royal Hong Kong Police Force 1969 to 30 June 1997) force has used this title since 1938.
France
In reference to the police of France and other French-speaking countries, the word "commissioner" might be used to translate commissaire, which also translates as commissary. It is a rank equating approximately to the British police rank of chief superintendent. The rank above is called "divisional commissary". A former intermediate rank of "principal commissary" was abolished in 2006.
Germany
The second-highest career bracket in German law enforcement leads to the rank of police commissioner or Kommissar. Training encompasses 3 years in a police academy (graduating as Diplom-Verwaltungswirt or Bachelor of Public Administration). The highest possible rank within this career bracket is that of Erster Polizeihauptkommissar or Erster Kriminalhauptkommissar. The work of a Kommissar, in general, centers on investigation of felonies, depending on the branch of police and department he belongs to. Roughly equivalent to a British commissioner would be (Landes-) Polizeipräsident or Inspekteur der Polizei, titles that differ between police forces in Germany.
Iceland
The National Police of Iceland employs a National Commissioner (Template:Lang-is) (four-star-rank) that is the head of 15 districts across Iceland. The Commissioner is not an experienced police officer whatsoever, like most police chiefs in Iceland are educated lawyers, not experienced police officers.
There are 15 districts in the Icelandic police, each district has a police chief of their own, but the National Commissioner is above them, the minister of interior Ólöf Nordal is in charge of law enforcement in Iceland.
Ireland
The Garda Commissioner is the officer overseeing the Garda Síochána, the national police force.
India
In India, Commissioner of Police designation is held by different ranks in IPS officers at different places. For example, it is held by DG rank officer in Ahmedabad, Hyderabad, Delhi and Chennai; by Additional DG (ADG) rank officer in Mumbai, Kolkata, Bangalore and Surat etc.; by IG rank officer in Gurgaon, Pune, Coimbatore, Madurai, Thane, Howrah, Siliguri etc.; by DIG rank officer in Trivandrum, Kochi, Bidhannagar etc.
Indonesia
In the Indonesian National Police, there are four levels of commissioner: police grand commissioner (Komisaris Besar Polisi), police grand commissioner adjutant (Ajun Komisaris Besar Polisi), police commissioner (Komisaris Polisi), and police commissioner adjutant (Ajun Komisaris Polisi). Due to strong military influence in its history, even now police ranks can be compared to the ranks of the Indonesian military. The four commissioner ranks are equivalent to the Indonesian military ranks of colonel, lieutenant colonel, major, and captain, respectively.
Italy
In the Italian Police, a commissioner (commissario) is the superintendent of a commissariato, a police station/detachment that can either serve an entire township of small or medium dimensions, or a limited area in a metropolitan city.
Malta
In The Malta Police Force, the Commissioner of Police is the head of the Police Department, responsible for its entire management and control.[3] Since 2016, a Chief Executive Officer at The Malta Police Force was appointed, to work alongside the Commissioner of Police to implement the Police Force Vision.[4]
New Zealand
The Commissioner of Police is the head of the New Zealand Police. The Commissioner is appointed for a three-year term by the Governor-General, and reports to the Minister of Police.[5] The position combines two functions, that of chief constable in charge of policing and cases, and chief executive responsible for assets and budgeting.[6] In military terms, the rank is equivalent to Lieutenant General.[7]
The Police Force Act 1886 split the police from the standing army and militia on 1 September 1886. Sir George Whitmore was appointed as the first commissioner, reporting to the Minister of Defence.[8] Early commissioners came from the United Kingdom with military or law enforcement experience, such as Walter Dinnie, who had served as Inspector at Scotland Yard.
In 2006, the commissioner was the highest paid person on the public payroll in New Zealand, earning $440,000.[9]
The Netherlands
The First Chief Commissioner is the head of the Netherlands Police. The Commissioner is appointed by the Crown, and report to the minister of Justice and Security. The commissioner is the highest ranking sworn police member in the country.
Nigeria
In Nigeria, a Commissioner of Police is the head of an entire State branch of the Nigerian Federal/ National Police Force.
Poland
In Poland, a commissioner (komisarz) is a relatively low rank, directly above podkomisarz and below nadkomisarz, comparable to a lieutenant of the armed forces.
Portugal
Historically, in the Civil Police of Portugal, a police commissioner (Template:Lang-pt) was a divisional commander in the Lisbon and Oporto police forces or the chief of a district police force in the other districts of the country. The chief of each of the Lisbon and Oporto police forces had the title of "commissioner general" (comissário-geral). With the reorganization of Civil Police and its transformation in the Public Security Police (PSP) in the 1930s, commissioner became a police rank in this force.
Presently, commissioner is an officer rank in the PSP, roughly equivalent to the military rank of captain. It is above the rank of sub-commissioner and below that of sub-intendent. Commissioners usually have the role of second-in-command of PSP divisions commanded by sub-intendents.
The rank insignia of a commissioner consists in a dark blue epaulet with three PSP stars (silver six points stars with the "SP" monogram in the center).
Romania
In the Romanian Police, similarly to the French Police (see commissaire de police), the rank of commissioner (comisar) is equivalent to the British police rank of superintendent (see also Romanian police ranks).
Spain
In Spain, a National Police commissioner is the chief of a police station. This rank is called comisario principal. There's a commissioner in the biggest cities and in smaller cities the chief of the police is headed by a superintendent. In the Civil Guard, this rank does not exist because it has a military organization. See National Police ranks and Civil Guard ranks
United Kingdom
In England and Wales, outside of Greater London, police and crime commissioners are directly-elected officials charged with securing efficient and effective policing of their police area. They are not warranted police officers, although they appoint and hold to account their chief constable. The first police and crime commissioners were elected in November 2012, with the lowest electorate turnout ever in England and Wales. Historically the title "commissioner" has denoted the professional chief police officer of certain police forces, and that is still the case within Greater London, with the Commissioner of the City of London Police and the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis. Both these commissioners are appointed, not elected, and since the 1950s have been career police officers (as opposed to the previous practice of appointing former British Army officers). Although they were technically justices of the peace until the 1970s,[10] the commissioners have always worn a similar uniform to police officers, and have been treated similarly in terms of pay and terms of service.
United States
Some U.S. police agencies use the title "commissioner" for the head of the police department. The term may refer to:
- A police chief, for example in the Philadelphia, California Highway Patrol, the Baltimore City Police Department and the Metropolitan Police Department, City of St. Louis.
- A civilian manager, for example in New York City, Boston and Nassau County.
- A member of a board of civilians who oversee the departments, for example in Los Angeles and Detroit.[11]
See also
- Sheriff
- Police and Crime Commissioner
- Chief Constable (UK)
- Chief of police (United States & Canada)
- Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis (Greater London)
- Commissioner of Police for the City of London
- Commissioner of Police (Hong Kong)
- Police Commissioner of Mumbai
- Police Commissioner of New Delhi
- Commissioner of Police (New Zealand)
- Commissioner of Police (Singapore)
- Police Commissioner (New York City)
- Police Commissioner (City of St. Louis)
- Commissaire de police
References
- ^ Bylaw 14040: Edmonton Police Commission Bylaw Archived 2013-09-28 at the Wayback Machine at Edmonton Police Commission
- ^ Appointment of the Chief of Police Archived 2013-09-28 at the Wayback Machine at Edmonton Police Commission
- ^ "Commissioner of Police". pulizija.gov.mt. Retrieved 2018-09-20.
- ^ "Position Of Chief Executive Officer At The Malta Police Force In The Ministry For Home Affairs And National Security". homeaffairs.gov.mt. Retrieved 2018-09-20.
- ^ "About us - Structure". New Zealand Police. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
- ^ "Govt appoints new Police Commissioner". The New Zealand Herald. 30 November 2010. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
- ^ "Insignia of rank". New Zealand Police. Retrieved 2009-01-20.
- ^ (Hill 1995, p. 7)
- ^ Thomson, Ainsley (5 April 2006). "Policeman on mission to restore confidence". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
- ^ The Metropolitan Commissioner ceased to be a justice on 1 April 1974 (see section 20 (commencement)) by virtue of section 1(9)(a) of the Administration of Justice Act 1973 (as in para 10, Schedule 1 to the Act), and the City Commissioner ceased to be a justice before 1973 by Part 2 of Schedule 5 to the Justices of the Peace Act 1968.
- ^ "Board of Police Commissioners | Boards | City of Detroit MI". www.detroitmi.gov. Retrieved 2015-12-31.