Police Union of German States
The Police Union of German States was the first known initiative for international law enforcement cooperation. Established in 1851 in response to the Revolutions of 1848, the organization served as an information exchange among the secret police forces of a number of German-speaking countries.
History
Background
In 1833 a centralized internal security service was established by the German Confederation. Headquartered in Frankfurt, the Central Investigating Agency consisted of several former investigating magistrates tasked with gathering information on seditious and subversive organizations—as well as the press, publishers, and bookstores—obtained by the police services of the member states of the Confederation. Information collected by the Central Investigating Agency was shared with the police of the German states concerned, as well as the Federal Convention. The same year, Austria established the Information Office in Mainz, which performed largely similar functions. The Central Investigating Agency and Information Office were both strictly intelligence agencies, with no police power of their own. The two institutions would occasionally exchange intelligence with each other.The successful suppression of seditious elements within German-speaking states led to the permanent suspension of the Central Investigating Agency in 1842, its services no longer needed.
Formation
During 1848, Europe was rocked by a series of revolts and revolutions with Austria, Prussia, Hungary, Bohemia, the Two Sicilies, and France all experiencing various levels of domestic unrest. In response to the events of three years prior, in 1851, the police president of Berlin – – sent letters to law enforcement officials in Hanover, Saxony and Vienna calling for cross-border cooperation in the policing of political radicals. As a result of von Hinckeldey's letter, a conference was held on 9 April 1851 in Dresden attended by staff from the secret police services of the independent states of Prussia, Austria, Saxony and Hanover. Before the end of the year, these forces were joined in cooperation with those of Bavaria, Baden and Württemberg and the Police Union of German States was informally created.Early proposals to expand the police union to include political and secret police agencies outside the German-speaking world ultimately did not bear fruit, though occasional instances of cooperation – usually through middlemen – with law enforcement agencies in Belgium, Denmark and Britain are recorded.
Dissolution and legacy
The union was dissolved in 1866 with the outbreak of the Seven Weeks' War between the Austrian Empire and the Kingdom of Prussia, the two dominant countries from which the Police Union drew its membership.The Police Union of German States has been described as the first known instance of formally institutionalized international law enforcement cooperation.