in Oslo The
National Police Directorate, located in
Downtown Oslo, is the central administration for the Norwegian Police Service. It conducts management and supervision of the specialist agencies and police districts, including organizational development and support activities. The
National Criminal Investigation Service is a national unit which works with
organized and serious crime. It both works as an assistant unit for police districts, with special focus on
technical and tactical investigation, in addition to being responsible on its own for organized crime. It acts as the center for international police cooperation, including participation in
Interpol and
Europol. The
National Authority for Investigation and Prosecution of Economic and Environmental Crime is responsible for complex cases of
economic crime and acts as a public prosecutor for those cases. The
National Police Immigration Service registers and identifies
asylum seekers and returns those which have their applications rejected. The
National Mobile Police Service is based in
Stavern and operates throughout the country. Their primary role is as highway patrol and manages the police reserves, although they also assist police districts in extraordinary events where extra manpower is needed or where they are in the vicinity. police transport van command vehicle The
Norwegian Border Commissioner is located in
Kirkenes and is responsible for managing the
Norway–Russia border and upholding the border agreement. Special consideration is needed as it is the only non-
Schengen Area land border of Norway. Border controls are the responsibility of the respective police district. The
National Police Computing and Material Service is responsible for managing the police's
information and communications technology,
procurement, security and real estate. Norway has two
joint rescue coordination centers,
one for Northern Norway located in Bodø and on
one for Southern Norway located in
Sola. Their jurisdiction border goes at the
65th parallel north (
Nord-Trøndelag–
Nordland border). Organizationally they are directly subordinate to the Ministry of Justice and the Police, although their operations are subordinate to the chiefs of police in
Salten and
Rogaland, respectively. The Police Security Service is Norway's
security agency; although considered a law enforcement agency, it is not subordinate to the National Police Directorate nor part of the Norwegian Police Service. Metropolitan Norway is divided into
27 police districts. Each district is further subdivided into local police stations and rural police districts, the latter led by a sheriff. Each police district is headquartered at a main police station and is led by a
chief of police. Police districts hold a common pool of resources and personnel and have a common administration and budget. Each also has a joint operations center which also acts as an
emergency call center for
112. Many of the larger districts have their own execution and enforcement authority, while this in integrated in the smaller districts. The size of the police districts varies, from Oslo with 2,500 employees and covering a population of 570,000 to
Eastern Finnmark which has 160 employees and 30,000 residents. mission near
Drøbak in the
Oslofjord Each districts has specially-trained mobile units for armed and other challenging missions, and dog units for narcotics and search and rescue missions. The police districts also have police boats for coastal waters and selected lakes, with focus on
driving under the influence, speeding and
environmental monitoring. In
Troms and
Finnmark, the
Reindeer Police are responsible for monitoring and supervising
reindeer husbandry and environmental supervision. As of 2009 there were 301 rural police districts, 68 local police stations and 10 execution and enforcement authorities. Oslo Police District has a series of special divisions and task forces which provide aid to all other police districts when necessary. It is responsible for the two police helicopters, which is mostly used for traffic motoring, search and rescue and apprehension. Svalbard is not part of the regular police districts—instead its law enforcement is handled by the Governor of Svalbard, who holds the responsibility as both county governor and chief of police, as well as other authority granted by the executive branch. Duties include
environmental policy,
family law, law enforcement, search and rescue, tourism management, information services, contact with foreign settlements, and adjudication in some areas of maritime inquiries and judicial examinations—albeit never in the same cases as acting as police.
Jan Mayen is subordinate to Salten Police District. ==Jurisdiction and capabilities==