Andreas Pilsl

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Andreas Pilsl (born February 23, 1969 ) is an Austrian police officer and since September 2012 State Police Director for Upper Austria .

Career

In 1988, after completing his basic training, Pilsl began serving as a gendarmerie officer at the post in Gallneukirchen . In 1993 and 1994 he completed his basic training as a senior civil servant and in January 1995 was appointed head of the human resources and disciplinary department in the regional gendarmeriekommando (LGK) Upper Austria. In July 1995 he was District Gendarmerie Commander and detective services officer for the district Perg from 1997 to 2000, he was then an officer in the unit stake Upper Austria.

In November 2000 he moved to the Office for Internal Affairs in the Ministry of the Interior (BMI), where he later rose to head. At the same time, he completed a management course there. In 2003 he moved back to the State Gendarmeriekommando Oberösterreich as the deputy head of the criminal department. In addition, from 2003 to 2006 he was a consultant in the cabinets of Interior Ministers Strasser , Platter and Prokop .

In September 2006 he was appointed state police commander for Upper Austria, after having been its deputy for around a year and a half. In the course of the restructuring of the security authorities in 2012 , he was finally appointed state police director for an initial five years; in 2017 his contract was extended for five years.

politics

For the ÖVP, Pilsl is on the municipal council of his home municipality Grein .

Private

Pilsl is married and has four daughters. His father was also a gendarme.

Awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Reinhold Gruber: A sign of continuity: Pilsl remains police chief. In: nachrichten.at. August 19, 2017. Retrieved September 27, 2018 .
  2. a b "STILL MY DREAM JOB". In: dieoberoesterreicherin.at. June 20, 2018, accessed September 27, 2018 .
  3. Ulrike Plank: Andreas Pilsl: This is how the top police officer in Upper Austria ticks. In: mein district.at. July 20, 2016, accessed September 27, 2018 .