Norbert Nedela

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Norbert Nedela (* 1951 in the Hersfeld district ) was a German police officer.

After graduating from high school, Nedela joined the Hessian State Criminal Police Office (HLKA) as a freelance applicant for the State of Hesse's criminal service. In 1974 he was appointed criminal superintendent and in 1981 he was appointed criminal inspector. During these seven years he headed various investigation groups and special commissions as well as a specialist teacher for criminology.

After graduating from the Police Leadership Academy , he first headed the management staff for criminal police measures on the occasion of the construction of runway 18 West , then for three years a criminal inspection at the Wiesbaden police headquarters.

Nedela was then appointed as deputy head of the state security department in the State Criminal Police Office. From 1990 to 1993 Nedela headed the Limburg an der Lahn police department before becoming deputy head of the Frankfurt am Main criminal police and, from September 1994, deputy director of the Hessian criminal police in the Ministry of the Interior. From February 2000, Norbert Nedela was again working in his former official home, the Hessian State Criminal Police Office - first as Vice President and from September 2002 as President.

With effect from August 1, 2003, the Hessian interior minister, Volker Bouffier, appointed Norbert Nedela as state police president .

Due to differences in the management of the Hessian police (internal illegal machinations, bullying, intrigues and defamation), Nedela was put into temporary retirement by the Hessian Interior Minister Boris Rhein on November 2, 2010 . According to Section 30 (I) of the Civil Service Status Act in conjunction with Section 57 No. 5 of the HBG, political civil servants can be temporarily retired at any time . The previous inspector of the Hessian police , Udo Münch , was appointed as the new state police president.

It is also recognized by critics that Nedela made a contribution to the development of the Hessian police. Under his leadership, a large Microsoft network with around 14,000 computer workstations was set up at the Hessen Police Department , and a large number of modern software applications and information systems were developed along with it. Under his leadership, there was a decrease in criminal offenses in the state of Hesse from 431,460 criminal offenses in 2002 to 407,022 recorded cases in 2009 with a simultaneous increase in the clearance rate from 48.2% to 57.8%.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Website of the Hessian Police accessed on Nov. 23, 2009
  2. Ralf Euler: Petition on the crisis in the police. In: FAZ.net . November 20, 2010, accessed October 13, 2018 .
  3. Press releases of the Hessian Ministry of the Interior and for Sport from November 2nd and 3rd, 2010
  4. Hesse police crime statistics 2002