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Keith Bristow
British Chief Constable
British Chief Constable
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Keith Bristow |
| honorific-suffix | QPM |
| image | Keith Bristow, Director, UK National Crime Agency (8446840209).jpg |
| caption | Bristow at Chatham House in 2013 |
| office | Director-General of the National Crime Agency |
| appointer | Theresa May |
| term_start | October 2013 |
| term_end | January 2016 |
| predecessor | Office created |
| successor | Lynne Owens |
| deputy | Phil Gormley |
| office1 | Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police |
| term_start1 | 2006 |
| term_end1 | 2011 |
| predecessor1 | John Burbeck |
| successor1 | Andy Parker |
| birthname | Keith Bristow |
| birth_date | |
| birth_place | Wolverhampton, United Kingdom |
| profession | Police officer |
|honorific-suffix = QPM
Keith Bristow QPM served as the first Director-General of the National Crime Agency from 2011 to 2016. He was formerly the Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police, and was appointed in October 2011 to oversee the creation of the NCA and, following its launch in 2013, led the organisation in its mission to cut serious and organised crime in the UK. Between 2011 and 2013, Bristow built and designed the agency, from concept to full operational crime-fighting, working closely with the Government, global partners and participating in the UK National Security Council. He is the former Vice Chairman of Arcanum, a global strategic intelligence company and a subsidiary of Magellan Investment Holdings and currently Executive Chairman of Heligan Group.
Early career
Bristow joined West Mercia Constabulary as a cadet and served in uniformed and Criminal Investigation Department roles. In 1997, as a Detective Chief Inspector, he was appointed staff officer to the president of the Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO). In 1998 he was promoted Detective Superintendent and seconded to the West Midlands Police Major Investigation Team, later transferring to the force permanently, where he served as operations manager and director of intelligence. Promoted to Chief Superintendent, he commanded an operational command unit in Birmingham.
Chief officer
In 2002, he was promoted Assistant Chief Constable and became a director of the National Criminal Intelligence Service. In 2005, he was appointed Deputy Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police and in July 2006 became Chief Constable.
He is also chair of the G8 Law Enforcement Group and from 2009 to 2011 was head of crime at ACPO, having previously been head of violence and public protection and of criminal use of firearms. He was the first British graduate of the European Top Senior Police Officer Course and holds a master's degree in organisational development, a postgraduate diploma in management studies, and a diploma in applied criminology. As an influential voice on contemporary law enforcement issues, he has a substantial record of keynote addresses both domestically and internationally. Of special note, in 2012 Bristow delivered the annual James Smart Lecture 'joined up public protection' and in 2014 the annual Police Foundation lecture 'policing with consent in the digital age'.
In October 2011, Home Secretary Theresa May, announced that Bristow would head the new National Crime Agency; Bristow spent two years designing and building the agency, including merging multiple organisations. The agency began operations two years later in October 2013.
In 2014 and 2015, he chaired the Five Eyes Law Enforcement Group (FELEG), a partnership between UK, US, Australia, Canada and New Zealand which seeks to reduce the international threat and impact of organised crime.
As of 2015, Bristow was paid a salary of £225,000 by the agency, making him one of the 328 most highly paid people in the British public sector at that time. On 26 November 2015, it was announced that he would be standing down in January 2016. He was succeeded by Lynne Owens, the former Chief Constable of Surrey Police, on 4 January 2016.
Bristow was awarded the Queen's Police Medal (QPM) in the 2008 Birthday Honours.
Arcanum
On January 20, 2016, Bristow was appointed as a senior advisor to Arcanum Global a Private Intelligence Agency. Acting on behalf of Wirecard, an Arcanum client, in 2019 Bristow is reported to have met the Financial Conduct Authority to open an investigation into the Financial Times for their reporting on Wirecard's financial irregularities. Executives at Wirecard had attempted to portray Financial Times investigative journalists Paul Murphy and Dan McCrum as having been paid by short sellers to bring down the company. Wirecard collapsed in 2020, with €1.9 billion missing from its accounts.
Honours



| [[File:Police Long Service and Good Conduct ribbon.png | 40px]] | Police Long Service and Good Conduct Medal |
|---|
Footnotes
References
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References
- "National Crime Agency - The Board".
- "National Crime Agency — Thank you and farewell from Keith Bristow This is...".
- (2022-05-12). "UNITED KINGDOM : Interrupt Labs takes ex-NCA chief Keith Bristow on vulnerabilities hunt - 12/05/2022".
- (20 January 2016). "UNITED KINGDOM : Keith Bristow joins Arcanum - 20/01/2016 - Intelligence Online".
- "Our Leadership Team".
- (February 2020)
- "Archived copy".
- (10 October 2011). "UK National Crime Agency head to be Keith Bristow". BBC News.
- "Keith Bristow joins Arcanum - Arcanum Global".
- (17 December 2015). "Senior officials 'high earners' salaries as at 30 September 2015 – GOV.UK".
- (26 November 2015). "Surrey Chief Constable Lynne Owens to take over National Crime Agency".
- "National Crime Agency – The Board".
- {{London Gazette. (14 June 2008)
- Hartmann, Yael. (January 20, 2016). "FORMER DIRECTOR GENERAL OF THE UK'S NATIONAL CRIME AGENCY JOINS ARCANUM".
- (2023-02-27). "How the Biggest Fraud in German History Unravelled".
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