Director-General of the National Crime Agency

The Director-General of the National Crime Agency is the head of the National Crime Agency in the United Kingdom, and as such is responsible for the overall management of the NCA. The director is appointed by, and reports to, the Home Secretary, but is not directly part of the Home Office.[2] The director is appointed on a five-year term basis, though this can be renewed (for another five-year term) or extended (for any period less than five years) at the Home Secretary's discretion.[3]

Director-General of the National Crime Agency
'Incumbent
Dame Lynne Owens
DCB CBE QPM MA'

since 4 January 2016
AppointerSecretary of State for the Home Department
Term length5 years, terms renewable or extendable for less than 5 years
Inaugural holderKeith Bristow
Formation7 October 2013
DeputySteve Rodhouse (Operations)
Nina Cope (Capabilities)
Graeme Biggar (National Economic Crime Centre)
Salary£214,722[1]
WebsiteNCA.gov.uk

As the director is in charge of a national agency with jurisdiction and investigative powers across the entire country, this post is considered to be the most senior police role in the United Kingdom, outranking the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis, as the director has the power to direct any chief constables and commissioners.[4] The director is supported by three deputy directors-general, in charge of Operations, Capabilities, and Economic Crime.[5]

The current director-general is Lynne Owens, having assumed the role in January 2016; her term has been extended until January 2023.[6]

NCA Directors-General

# Name Term Began Term Ended Length Home Secretary Ref
1Keith Bristow, QPM7 October 2013 3 January 2016 2 years and 89 days Theresa May [7]
2Dame Lynne Owens, DCB, CBE, QPM4 January 2016 Incumbent5 years and 23 days [8]
Amber Rudd
Sajid Javid
Priti Patel [6]

See also

References

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