Which is higher inspector or sergeant
Very Useful. If you can't find the answer? Ask a question. More related questions. Can you tell me about Community Support Officers? Do the police do any courses for dog owners? Do the police investigate all reported crimes and incidents? Do the police provide any information on bereavement? Do the police record all telephone calls, including calls? Do you have contact details for all of the police forces in England and Wales? Does a police officer from England and Wales have a power of arrest anywhere in Great Britain?
Does a police officer's power apply when they are not on duty? How do I join the police? I am organising an event charity run, protest etc , do I need to contact the police? I have seen police officers using handheld devices, can you tell me about these? Constable is the first rank, one rank below a sergeant and five ranks below chief superintendent in all UK police forces.
Within the British Police, all police officers are sworn in as and hold the basic powers of a constable. Upon being sworn in, each officer starts at the rank of constable and is required to undergo a two-year probationary period. Upon successful completion, constables can remain at their current rank, specialize in criminal investigations or one of many other specialist units, or apply for promotion to sergeant, the first supervisory rank. Constables wear epaulette attached to the uniform, displaying their collar number also called a shoulder number.
Within Greater London's Metropolitan Police, all constables and sergeants display a divisional call sign, as well as an individual number. Within British police, Sergeant is the first of the supervisory ranks.
It is senior to that of Constable but junior to that of Inspector. Within the British police, inspector is the second supervisory rank. It is senior to that of sergeant, but junior to that of chief inspector.
The rank is mostly operational, meaning that inspectors are directly concerned with day-to-day policing. Uniformed inspectors are often responsible for supervising a duty shift made up of constables and sergeants, or act in specialist roles such as supervising road traffic policing.
The rank of inspector has existed since the foundation of the Metropolitan Police, formed in , when it was used to designate the rank immediately below that of superintendent, and many Commonwealth police forces also use the term. Plain-clothes detective inspectors are equal in rank to their uniformed counterparts, the prefix "detective" identifying them as having been trained in criminal investigation and being part of or attached to their force's Criminal Investigation Department CID.
The epaulettes of uniformed inspectors, unlike those of constables and sergeants, do not show a divisional or personal identification number. Instead they feature Order of the Bath stars, informally known as "pips", being the same insignia as those of a lieutenant in the British Army.
In the Metropolitan Police, the rank was formerly officially known as Station Inspector to distinguish it from the more senior rank of Sub-Divisional Inspector abolished in A Station Inspector wore a single star on his epaulettes until , when this changed to a star over two bars to accommodate the new rank of Junior Station Inspector wearing a star over one bar.
In the British police, a chief inspector is senior to an inspector and junior to a superintendent. Today, the function of chief inspectors varies from force to force. In some forces such as Hampshire Constabulary and Sussex Police, the chief inspector is the senior officer in command of a district usually consisting of one or more local authority areas.
In this respect they have replaced superintendents as the head police officer of the larger towns. Detective chief inspector DCI is usually the minimum rank held by a senior investigating officer SIO , who heads major investigations e. The rank badge of a chief inspector is three Bath stars "pips" worn on the epaulettes.
This is the same badge as a captain in the British Army. Until , chief inspectors in the Metropolitan Police wore a crown on their epaulettes instead. Chief inspector was one of the ranks proposed for abolition in the Sheehy Report, but in the end it was retained.
A number of city and burgh police forces in Scotland used the rank of lieutenant until , when it was replaced by chief inspector.
The rank of superintendent is senior to chief inspector and junior to chief superintendent. The rank badge is a crown worn on the epaulettes, the same as a major in the British Army box. The rank of superintendent was introduced at the foundation of the Metropolitan Police in Each division was commanded by a superintendent.
The rank below superintendent was originally inspector until the introduction of chief inspector in
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