Office Head (Name Not Listed)
Deputy Director
Office of the Director
8 reports
Federal Bureau of Prisons
Government · Hybrid structure · 35K employees · Washington, DC
Interactive org chart
Explore the agency leadership model, component structure, and reporting layers from official public sources.
Choose a prompt, then open an AI app and paste.
Download the CSV data insteadThe Federal Bureau of Prisons operates federal correctional facilities nationwide through six regional offices, supported by centralized policy, programs, health services, and reentry functions under DOJ.
What to model
Start with the public baseline, then use the scenario views and source-backed changes to ask what happens when leadership, span, or team ownership shifts.
The people
6 senior leadership roles or offices from official public sources. Use this section as a current agency-leadership index, not a private-company filing table.
Deputy Director
Office of the Director
8 reports
Associate Deputy Director
Field Operations
6 reports
Director
Office of the Director
19 reports
Chief of Staff
Office of the Director
0 reports
Commissioner
Federal Prison Industries, Inc. (UNICOR)
0 reports
Director
National Institute of Corrections
0 reports
The operating model
3 offices, branches, or components organize the agency mission. Tile size scales with estimated staff where public estimates exist.
30K employees
p3
Oversees operation of federal prisons and reentry offices through six geographic regions.
2K employees
p5
Government corporation providing employment and job training to incarcerated individuals.
200 employees
p6
Provides training, technical assistance, and leadership to correctional agencies nationwide.
The agency brief
The comparison
Compared with other DOJ components such as the FBI or DEA, the BOP is more operationally regionalized and service-oriented, managing long-term facilities rather than investigations. Relative to the Department of Homeland Security’s detention components, BOP has a broader statutory mandate for rehabilitation, education, …
Current signals
Director William K. Marshall III was sworn in during the prior year; no additional recent leadership changes are documented in the provided sources.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons is led by the Director, currently William K. Marshall III.
The BOP manages federal correctional institutions, ensures safe and humane confinement, and prepares incarcerated individuals for successful reentry.
Major components include Field Operations through six regional offices, Federal Prison Industries (UNICOR), and the National Institute of Corrections, along with national divisions for programs, health services, administration, and IT.
The BOP is a component of the U.S. Department of Justice and ultimately reports to the Attorney General.
The org chart helps analyze spans of control, regional oversight, and options for reorganizing or adding cross-cutting capabilities such as data or reentry initiatives.
Reference
If you reference this page in research, analysis, or news writing, use one of the formats below. Citation includes the SEC filing source where applicable.
Creately. (2026). Federal Bureau of Prisons organizational structure. Creately. Retrieved , from https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/federal-bureau-of-prisons/"Federal Bureau of Prisons Organizational Structure." Creately, April 1, 2026, https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/federal-bureau-of-prisons/. Accessed .Creately. "Federal Bureau of Prisons Organizational Structure." Last modified April 1, 2026. https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/federal-bureau-of-prisons/.Permanent URL: https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/federal-bureau-of-prisons/ · last updated 2026-04-01