Mariusz Kamiński

Mariusz Kamiński (born 25 September 1965 in Sochaczew) is a Polish politician who served as the head of the Central Anticorruption Bureau (CBA) from August 2006 to October 2009. Since 14 August 2019, he has served as the Minister of the Interior and Administration, in addition to coordinating Polish secret services, which he had done previously as a minister without portfolio.

Mariusz Kamiński
Kamiński in 2019
Minister of the Interior and Administration[1]
Assumed office
14 August 2019
Prime MinisterMateusz Morawiecki
Preceded byElżbieta Witek
Minister without portfolio
In office
16 November 2015  14 August 2019
Prime MinisterBeata Szydło
Mateusz Morawiecki
Head of the Central Anticorruption Bureau
In office
3 August 2006  13 October 2009
Succeeded bypl:Paweł Wojtunik
Member of the Sejm
Assumed office
25 September 2005
Constituency24 – Białystok
Personal details
Born (1965-09-25) 25 September 1965
NationalityPolish
Political partyLaw and Justice
Alma materUniversity of Warsaw
Signature

Career

He had previously been a member of the Sejm, elected on 25 September 2005, getting 9142 votes in 19 Warsaw district, as a candidate on the Law and Justice list. He was also a member of Sejm 1997-2001 and Sejm 2001-2005. Kamiński was dismissed (as the head of CBA) on 13 October 2009 by prime minister Donald Tusk.[2]

Kamiński was sentenced to three years in prison for abuse of power in March 2015 but had appealed. After the 2015 Polish parliamentary election the Polish President Andrzej Duda pardoned Kamiński, the President's spokesmen argued that people who fight corruption "deserve special protection." In March 2016, the appeal court while examining the appeals raised during the case, in regards to the decision above of the President, annulled the judgement and discontinued the proceedings. On 31 May 2017 the Supreme Court, in an adopted resolution, recognised that pardon as ineffective. Despite the opinion of European Commission, CJEU, Venice Commission, Association of Polish Judges "Iustitia" and the United States Department of State, Polish Constitutional Tribunal ruled (with the one dissenting opinion) that the constitutional right of grace as a concept broader than pardon also includes acts of individual abolition. Afterwards, Kamiński became the head of the secret services as a minister without portfolio.[3]

Personal life

Kamiński is strongly opposed to Communism. In 1981, he was sentenced to a year in a correctional facility for desecrating a monument of gratitude to the Red Army. He is also one of the few members of the conservative Law and Justice Party who is publicly an atheist.[4]

Awards

Commander's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta

See also

References

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