Police general

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Police general , also police general , is a top rank of generals or the general term for police generals in some countries that do not practice a strict separation between police and military. Translations of the designation into foreign languages ​​are sometimes inconsistent because the preferences of the authorities determine the designation in the respective official language. According to today's NATO rank codes , this rank would be comparable to OF-8 ( Lieutenant General ). The practice of assigning rankings may differ in the respective countries.

The term general of the police , which is often used synonymously today , originally meant a rank designation for a three-star general, comparable to the general of the infantry in the army.

Germany

The position of a police general as the highest police chief in Germany is closely linked to German history. In the 20th century, the management of the police was assigned to the respective interior ministries of the federal states. Centralistic structures were introduced during the time of National Socialist Germany. After 1945, the state governments, in coordination with the Allies, merged the regional criminal investigation offices into "State criminal police offices". The Basic Law confirmed that police sovereignty does not lie with the federal government, but with the states. The federal government was only granted the authority to maintain a central criminal police office ( Art. 73 , Art. 87 GG ). On this constitutional basis, the law on the establishment of a Federal Criminal Police Office (Bundeskriminalamtes) (BKAG) came into force on March 15, 1951 . Further police authorities at the federal level were later established.

Police during the Weimar Republic

During the time of the Weimar Republic , the highest police command lay with the respective state governments of the former German states . There was no centralistic structure for the whole of the countries. A well-known police officer from that time was

  • Magnus Heimannsberg was in command of the Berlin Police from 1927 to 1932. He was deposed in 1932 and later arrested several times. After the war he was rehabilitated. In 1945 he was a retired police general until 1948. D. Appointed chief of the German police in Greater Hesse, then police chief in Wiesbaden until his retirement.

Police of National Socialist Germany

After the seizure by the Nazi security organs were restructured successively. The German police were centralized from 1933 and then divided into two branches in 1936: the Ordnungspolizei and the Security Police .

Reichsführer SS collar tab

Police general with the highest rank of police (see Army General ) were in the German Reich:

Collar tab general of the police
Shoulder piece general of the police

General of the police was in the German Reich until 1945 a rank within the German police , comparable to the SS-Obergruppenführer and General of the Waffen-SS .

The rank of general in the police is not to be confused with the higher-ranking police general .

Persons with the rank of general of the police were until 1945:

Post-war period in Germany

The post-war period in Germany had no central command of the German police. Initially, state power lay with the Allied Control Council . In the area of Soviet military administration in Germany was Georgy Zhukov supreme chief of police. In the period that followed, various regulations such as the occupation statute gradually established the higher management of the police in the regions. At the local level, police structures were retained and in some cases worked together with the military police under the leadership of the military structures during the occupation. One of the few well-known police officers who worked as chief of the police at this time is Magnus Heimannsberg.

GDR police

The entirety of the police in the GDR consisted of the areas of the German People's Police , People's Police Readiness , Transport Police and the German Border Police .

The following persons each had the top management of the German People's Police . The actual ranks give way e.g. T. considerably from:

Federal Republic of Germany

German Federal Police - Higher Service 09.svg

Since the separation of the police and the military, military ranks no longer exist in the police forces of the Federal Republic of Germany - state police and federal police. Police officers therefore use official titles for the German police . The state government of the respective state police authority is in charge .

Exceptions were the railway police and the Federal Border Police , which were combined to form the Federal Police in 2005 . The Federal Border Guard used military ranks until 1976, after which they were transferred to official titles . The respective heads of the BGS can be found in the list of inspectors of the BGS . Federal police authorities and other internal security authorities are subordinate to the Federal Ministry of the Interior .

Persons who were at least colloquially referred to as police general in the Federal Republic are

France

Police national-inspecteur général.svg

The post is called "Inspecteur général". The rank of service may differ. Known owners are:

  • Richard Lizurey (currently as of February 2018) Post : "Directeur général", rank: "Général de Corps d'armée"

Austria

Bp-rd-generaldir-os.png

The highest police chief in Austria is the general director for public security in the Federal Ministry of the Interior and thus the highest-ranking official in the Austrian security administration . The respective owners can be found in the list of General Directors of the Second Republic .

Serbia

Known owner:

literature

  • Ruth Bettina Birn : The Higher SS and Police Leaders - Himmler's representatives in the Reich and in the occupied territories . Düsseldorf 1986, ISBN 3-7700-0710-7 .
  • Henri Schmidt: A Nevigeser in Berlin (Heimannsberg biography), magazine of the Bergisches Geschichtsverein , published in the issue "Historical Contributions No. 23"
  • Torsten Diedrich, Hans Gotthard Ehlert, Rüdiger Wenzke: In the service of the party: Handbook of the armed organs of the GDR , Ch. Links Verlag, 1998, ISBN 9783861531609

Individual evidence

  1. Magnus Heimannsberg in the Federal Archives: files of the Reich Chancellery Retrieved on February 4, 2018.
  2. Ruth Bettina Birn (see literature list)
  3. a b c d e Diedrich, Ehlert, Wenzke: In the service of the party
  4. Ulrich Braun, WAZ : Heimannsberg biography, The trail leads from Neviges to Argentina.Retrieved on February 4, 2018.
  5. Javier Solana, EU High Representative for the CFSP.Retrieved February 3, 2018.
  6. HNA: Supreme Riot Police Retires: Accessed via GSG9 and G20 on February 3, 2018.
  7. Direction générale de la gendarmerie nationale (DGGN) , accessed on February 3, 2018.
  8. United Nations: Vlastimir Đorđević Convicted for Crimes in Kosovo.Retrieved February 5, 2018.