The BPOL national headquarters (BPOL-
Präsidium) in
Potsdam performs all central control functions. Eight regional headquarters (BPOL-
Direktion) control the BPOL stations that conduct rail police and border protection missions. These areas of responsibility conform to the federal state boundaries which they did not do prior to 1 March 2008. The regional headquarters are as follows: •
Bad Bramstedt covering
Schleswig-Holstein and
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern as well as the North Sea and Baltic Sea as part of the
German Federal Coast Guard. •
Hanover covering
Bremen,
Hamburg and
Lower Saxony. •
Sankt Augustin covering
North Rhine-Westphalia. •
Koblenz covering
Saarland,
Rhineland-Palatinate and
Hesse. •
Stuttgart covering
Baden-Württemberg. •
Munich covering
Bavaria. •
Pirna covering
Saxony,
Saxony-Anhalt and
Thuringia. •
Berlin covering
Berlin and
Brandenburg. These regional headquarters each have an investigation department and a mobile inspection and observation unit. Moreover, they control the 67 BPOL stations (BPOL-
Inspektion) which in turn control the
Bundespolizeireviere or precincts located in places that require a 24-hour presence by BPOL officers. A special
Direktion is responsible for
Frankfurt International Airport. The central school for advanced and vocational training is in Lübeck and controls the six basic training schools in
Swisttal,
Neustrelitz,
Oerlenbach,
Walsrode,
Eschwege and
Bamberg. It is also in charge of the Federal Police Sport School in
Bad Endorf and a competitive sport project in Kienbaum near Berlin. The sport school specialises in winter sport events and has trained many of Germany's top skiers and skaters such as
Claudia Pechstein. The
Zentrale Direktion Bundesbereitschaftspolizei controls the mobile support and rapid reaction battalions located in
Bayreuth,
Deggendorf, Blumberg (near Berlin),
Hünfeld,
Uelzen,
Duderstadt,
Sankt Augustin,
Bad Bergzabern,
Bad Düben and
Ratzeburg. The number of
Bereitschaftspolizei companies increased in March 2008 from 28 to 29 comprising approx. 25 percent of Germany's police support units.
Strength The
Bundespolizei as at 1 September 2020 consists of 51,315 personnel: • 34,670 are fully trained law enforcement officers • 8,215 candidates • 8,430 salaried civilian (unarmed) support personnel
BPOL Special Units The following special units also exist: • The BPOL Aviation Group is subordinate to the Bundespolizei Direktion 11 (BPOLD 11) in Berlin. It controls the five aviation squadrons around the country that operate the force's helicopters. These are located in
Fuhlendorf (north, with satellite airfield in
Gifhorn), Blumberg (east), Fuldatal (centre),
Oberschleißheim (south) and Sankt Augustin (west). Its duties include;
border surveillance, monitoring installations belonging to
Deutsche Bahn, helping in serious accidents and disasters in Germany and abroad, searching for missing persons, searching for criminals on the run, supporting the
police forces of the federal states, providing transportation for persons whose security is endangered, providing transportation for guests of the Federal government, supporting federal and state authorities, and providing air search and rescue services in coordination with the 12 air rescue centers throughout Germany. • The
BFE+ units (abbreviated from
Securing of Evidence and Arrest of Suspects) are a specialized division of regular BPOL
arresting units. These units were organized after the
2015 Charlie Hebdo attacks in France with the aim of responding faster and with higher firepower to massive terrorist attacks. BFE+ units are decentralized and work as a first response force until the more specialized and centralized GSG9 arrive at the scene, and are equipped similarly to
SEK units. • The
GSG 9 counter-terrorism group is directly subordinate to the BPOL HQ. • The BPOL Information and Communications Center is now a department of the BPOL HQ in Potsdam. • Most special units of the Federal Police are subordinate to the unified command of
Federal Police Directorate 11. • The
water police stations with 16 patrol craft and helicopters are part of the
German Federal Coast Guard and assigned to coastal BPOL stations. The watercraft include six offshore patrol vessels, e.g. those of the
Bad Bramstedt class, and the large
Potsdam class as well as a number of fast inshore vessels and one
tugboat. ==History==