Assistant_chief_constable

Assistant chief constable

Assistant chief constable

Add article description


Assistant chief constable (ACC) is the third highest rank in all British territorial police forces (except the Metropolitan Police and City of London Police, in which the equivalent rank is commander), as well as the British Transport Police, Ministry of Defence Police and Civil Nuclear Constabulary.

UK Police Assistant Chief Constable Epaulette
UK Police Assistant Chief Constable Epaulette

Each force has between one and six assistant chief constables. They are the lowest officers at chief officer level, below the chief constable and deputy chief constable, and rank immediately above chief superintendents. Assistant chief constables usually hold portfolios (e.g. for crime, operations or territorial policing). In larger forces, ACCs may be given responsibilities for policing major territories within the force area.[1]

Senior police civilian staff (such as directors of finance and resources) hold equivalent status and are generally known as assistant chief officers.

Insignia

The rank badge worn by an assistant chief constable or a commander consists of crossed tipstaves within a wreath, roughly analogous to the former insignia of a brigadier-general in the British Army or Royal Marines, which was a crossed sword and baton, sans wreath.

See also


References

  1. Bryant, Robin, ed. (2007) [2006]. "14.8.6: Becoming a Chief Officer". Blackstone's Student Police Officer Handbook. Oxford University Press. pp. 707–708.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Assistant_chief_constable, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.