SC Deadline Forces Tamil Nadu to Restart DGP Appointment Process

The Supreme Court has directed Tamil Nadu to complete the appointment of a regular Director-General of Police within three weeks, restarting a stalled process. The state must send a panel of eligible officers to the Union Public Service Commission for empanelment, as per guidelines established in the Prakash Singh case. Top contenders reportedly include officers like Seema Agrawal and Rajeev Kumar, whose names were previously shortlisted but rejected by the state government. The state's law minister had earlier claimed the UPSC's recommended names were unacceptable, alleging the central government disregarded Tamil Nadu's views.

Key Points: Tamil Nadu Restarts DGP Appointment After SC Order

  • SC sets 3-week deadline for DGP appointment
  • State to send fresh panel to UPSC
  • Top contenders include Seema Agrawal, Rajeev Kumar
  • Process follows Prakash Singh case guidelines
2 min read

SC deadline pushes TN to restart DGP appointment process

Tamil Nadu restarts DGP selection after Supreme Court's 3-week deadline. Process follows UPSC empanelment rules from Prakash Singh case.

"the three names recommended by the UPSC were not acceptable to the State - S. Reghupathy"

Chennai, Feb 14

The process of appointing a regular Director-General of Police and Head of Police Force for Tamil Nadu has been set in motion once again, following a recent directive from the Supreme Court mandating that the selection be completed within three weeks.

The order was issued while disposing of a contempt petition filed by Chennai-based petitioner Kishore K. Swamy, who alleged that the State government had failed to adhere to the Apex Court's guidelines on the appointment of regular DGPs.

Acting on the court's direction, senior officials have resumed discussions to finalise a fresh panel of eligible DGP-rank officers to be forwarded to the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) for empanelment.

Under the Supreme Court's framework laid down in the landmark Prakash Singh case, the State government must send a panel of eligible officers to the UPSC, which will then shortlist three names.

From this list, the State will appoint one officer as DGP/HoPF, granting a minimum tenure of two years irrespective of the officer's date of superannuation.

According to official sources, the State is expected to forward its panel within a week. The UPSC will then have two weeks to finalise the shortlist.

In terms of seniority, Seema Agrawal, Rajeev Kumar, and Sandeep Rai Rathore remain the top contenders. Their names had earlier been shortlisted by the UPSC in October 2025 when Tamil Nadu submitted its list of eligible officers.

However, the State government did not make a selection at that time and allowed G. Venkatraman to continue as DGP(in-charge).

On October 22, Law Minister S. Reghupathy publicly stated that the three names recommended by the UPSC were not acceptable to the State, alleging that the Union government had disregarded Tamil Nadu's views during the empanelment process.

Other senior DGP-rank officers in the State include K. Vanniaperumal, Mahesh Kumar Aggarwal, Vinit Dev Wankhede, Sanjay Mathur, S. Davidson Devasirvatham, Sandeep Mittal and Bala Naga Devi.

Sources indicated that there has been no confirmed change in the eligibility status of the top three officers.

Although a minimum residual service of six months is typically required, it is calculated from the date the vacancy arose - September 1, 2025 - which may keep certain officers within consideration.

Officials said the State would comply with the UPSC's Single Window System while finalising and forwarding the panel.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
Good to see the SC stepping in. A stable, tenure-based DGP is crucial for law and order. The constant "in-charge" arrangements weaken the police force's authority. Hope they pick the most competent officer, not the most politically convenient one. 🤞
S
Suresh O
The Law Minister's statement from October is telling. If the state felt the UPSC panel was unfair, they should have challenged it legally right away, not just sit on it. This contempt petition was inevitable. Process matters.
A
Anjali F
Interesting that Seema Agrawal is a top contender. Would be great to have a woman as the DGP of Tamil Nadu. It's 2026! We need more diversity in such top posts. Her credentials seem solid.
M
Michael C
Watching from abroad, this seems like a classic case of federal tensions playing out. The state vs. centre dynamic in police appointments is a challenge in many large democracies. The SC's timeline should force a resolution.
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Karthik V
With all due respect to the court's order, a three-week deadline for such a crucial appointment feels rushed. Selecting the state's top cop needs careful deliberation, not a scramble to meet a judicial deadline. Hope quality isn't compromised.
N
Nisha Z

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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