Paul Dickopf
Paul Dickopf was a member of the NSDAP and SS in the Security Service and a secret agent in Switzerland, who became a member of the German Federal Criminal Police Office. Between 1965 and 1971, he was the 4th president of the BKA and a paid "unilateral agent" of the CIA.
While Dickopf himself was not directly involved in war crimes, he did protect many former Nazis who were war criminals.
Career
Under the Nazi government of Adolf Hitler, he was a member of the Sturmabteilung and the Schutzstaffel. Dickopf, before and during World War II had been an active Nazi officer in the Schutzstaffel with SS number 337259. Dickopf's SS personnel file reveals that he became a member in 1935 of the National Socialist German Students' League having the same status and membership requirements of the official Nazi Party, the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei.After voluntary army service he began his police career in 1937 at the Kriminal-Polizei as a criminal commissar candidate serving the last three months in the Sicherheitsdienst des Reichsführers-SS. In 1938 he volunteered for the Führerschule of 'Sipo'. Fifteen SS officers of the rank of lieutenant upwards sponsored him. Dickopf was recommended for officer rank by the commandant of the SD school and graduated as an SS Untersturmführer became a criminal commissar and member of the SD. Dickopf later enrolled in the general SS in 1939, however, any record of his war activities are obscure since his SS file for that period is incomplete.
Between 1965 and 1971 Dickopf headed the German Federal Criminal Police Office.
He was dismissed after mounting criticism concerning his administration of the BKA. Hans-Dietrich Genscher nonetheless praised him as a "role model for the German police".
Dickopf was elected as the president of Interpol in 1968, apparently aided by the contacts of François Genoud to the Arab world.
. While his former Nazi connections were known, he maintained his post until 1972.
Dickopf died after a brief illness on September 19, 1973, in Bonn, Germany.
On June 25, 2012, the "Paul-Dickopf-Straße", a street in Meckenheim, seat of the BKA, bearing Dickopf's name as a remembrance for his presidency of the BKA, was renamed "Gerhard-Boeden-Straße" as a symbolic act following the revelations about Dickopf's masterminding the recruiting of former Nazi officials into the BKA.