Intelligence Officer - Counter Corruption Unit
Prospective officers and staff must be held to a higher standard of behaviour and accountability than members of the public, and that therefore their right to privacy can be fettered in certain circumstances. This is to ensure that members of the police are fully aware and accountable for the unique powers entrusted to them and the standards of professional behaviour they swear to uphold.
An exciting opportunity has arisen for an officer to join the Counter Corruption Unit (CCU), working from a location near Birmingham.
The successful applicants will be skilled in phased and proportionate intelligence investigation and will be able to identify opportunities. Candidates will score well if they can demonstrate a keen eye for identifying risk, suggesting options to manage and mitigate accordingly. The ability to turn intelligence into evidence is also a valuable asset within this post.
Strong candidates will be adept in using computer systems and be able to utilise extensive data sets to draw inferences and corroborate – or negate – corruption concerns. Applicants should have expertise in producing reports, including rationalised decision making and recommendations. Equally, interest staff should also be able to demonstrate that they are team players and self-motivated.
As part of a dynamic team, flexibility is required when completing enquiries. The successful candidate will contribute to the wider departmental aims of ensuring our processes are pragmatic, transparent, fair and sensitive to the needs of our communities.
Core responsibilities
- Receive, assess and handle intelligence and information appropriately
- Develop information using all available tools and techniques – with ownership of initial intelligence through to investigation
- Management of notifiable association referrals – ensuring objective assessment of risk
- Skilled report writing to brief management around organisational threat and risk
- Extensive system access and data exploration, including information gleaned through criminal legislation (eg IPA, RIPA) and employee management (eg tools used under Lawful Business Monitoring)
**Please note, there will be no requirement or expectation that the staff member will be surveillance due to the requirements of this position**
Other Key responsibilities
- Use of NDM to identify risk and ways to mitigate it
- Suggest innovative ways to proactively identify corruption using all available datasets.
- Handling of covertly obtained material in accordance with identified policy and process.
- Preparation of RIPA, IPA and Lawful Business Monitoring applications.
- Provide intelligence support to covert investigation
It is expected that successful candidates will hold IPP qualification or be willing to achieve this in the role.
Essential
Desirable
Additional Requirements
**Please note that this role will not attract shift allowance Vetting Successful applicants will be required to pass Management Vetting and Security Clearance scrutiny prior to commencing their role, this will include a full background & financial disclosure as part of the vetting process. Medical Appointment to this role will be dependent upon successfully medical checks, which may include a drugs test. If you have any queries regarding the post, please contact CCU Intelligence Manager Peter Baghurst peter.baghurst@westmidlands.police.uk
West Midlands Police is a Disability Confident Leader - the highest level an organisation can achieve under the scheme run by the Department of Work and Pensions. As part of our commitment we operate a ‘Disability Confident Interview Scheme’ - all candidates who declare a disability and meet the essential criteria for the role will be offered an interview.
It is important to note that there may be occasions where it is not practicable or appropriate to interview all disabled people who meet the essential criteria for the job. For example: in certain recruitment situations such as high-volume, seasonal and high-peak times, the employer may wish to limit the overall numbers of interviews offered to both disabled people and non-disabled people. In these circumstances, the employer could select the candidates who best meet the essential criteria for the job, as they would do for non-disabled applicants.
"Diversity and Inclusion Vision: Maximise the potential of people from all backgrounds through a culture of fairness and inclusion to deliver the best service for our communities"
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