INTERPOL’s mandate – to promote the widest possible police cooperation around the world – is built on an essential premise: Trust. Officials’ trust in our Organization; member countries’ trust in the General Secretariat and other INTERPOL bodies; and public trust by those whom we ultimately serve. This trust is maintained by promoting good governance across our Organization.
INTERPOL’s reputation and success depend on its compliance with the highest ethical standards, at both the organizational level and individual level.
The Organization’s five values were redefined following their submission to the General Assembly in 2025. They are as follows:
- Integrity
- Respect
- Teamwork
- Neutrality
- Transparency
New INTERPOL Code of Ethics (2026)
In 2025, as part of INTERPOL's new Strategic Framework, five organizational values were adopted – integrity, respect, teamwork, neutrality, and transparency – reflecting the spirit in which the Organization carries out its mission.
The new INTERPOL Code of Ethics builds on these values and translates them into a shared ethical reference.
The standing committee on ethical matters
The Standing Committee on Ethical Matters (SCEM) is an advisory board to the INTERPOL General Secretariat on ethical and due diligence matters. It was founded in 2015 and meets annually, presenting its outcomes in the forms of recommendations.
The objective of the SCEM is to reflect and advise on the continuous development and implementation of the Ethical Framework at INTERPOL. This includes studies on reputational risks relative to proposed external contributions, and initiatives to enhance transparency and accountability regarding contributions from the private sector. This also includes addressing future challenges, notably the ethical framework within emerging technologies used in fulfilling the organization's mandate.
Composition
Membership of the Committee is reserved to experts in ethical questions, who originate from the field of law enforcement, academia, or international organizations.
Chair
Ms Ann Encontre, former Director of Ethics for the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR)
Members
• Mr Alok Kumar Pateria, Police Officer (retired), Indian Police Service.
• Ms Anja Kaspersen, IEEE SA Director, Frontier Issues and Emerging Spaces and Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs Senior Fellow/Co-Director, AI and Equality Initiative.
• Ms Helena Gravato, Criminal Investigator (Chief Inspector), Senior Advisor at the Judicial Police National Director Office. Previous Head of the National Central Bureau (NCB) Lisbon.
• Mr John W. Letteney, Assistant Town Manager, Town of Morrisville, North Carolina. Chief of Police (Retired), Thomasville (GA) Police Department. Past President of the International Association of Chiefs of Police.
Secretariat
INTERPOL General Secretariat Ethics and Corporate Responsibility Office.
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