Director
Director, United States Marshals Service
Office of the Director
14 reports
United States Marshals Service
Government · Hybrid structure · 6K employees · Arlington, VA
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 insteadOrg chart derived from the DOJ Organization, Mission and Functions Manual for the United States Marshals Service, reflecting officially documented components and reporting lines as of the current quarter.
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.
Director, United States Marshals Service
Office of the Director
14 reports
Deputy Director
Office of the Director
9 reports
Chief of Staff
Office of the Director
0 reports
Assistant Director, Congressional and Public Affairs
Congressional and Public Affairs
0 reports
General Counsel
Office of General Counsel
0 reports
Director, Equal Employment Opportunity
Equal Employment Opportunity
0 reports
The operating model
3 offices, branches, or components organize the agency mission. Tile size scales with estimated staff where public estimates exist.
p7
Oversees judicial security, prisoner operations, witness security, and prisoner transportation in support of the federal courts.
p8
Responsible for fugitive apprehension, investigative operations, and intelligence coordination domestically and internationally.
p9
Provides enterprise support services including training, human resources, IT, financial management, procurement, and asset forfeiture.
The agency brief
The comparison
Compared with the FBI or DEA, which are primarily investigative, the U.S. Marshals Service has a broader operational mandate that integrates court security, fugitive apprehension, prisoner transport, and witness protection. Unlike the Bureau of Prisons, which focuses on incarceration, USMS manages custody and movement …
Current signals
No recent leadership changes are documented in the provided official source text.
The United States Marshals Service is led by a Director, who is appointed under the authority of the Attorney General of the United States.
USMS enforces federal laws and supports the federal justice system by protecting the judiciary, apprehending fugitives, managing prisoner operations and transportation, safeguarding witnesses, and executing court orders.
Major components include Judicial Support Operations, Investigations, Administration, district U.S. Marshals offices, and key headquarters offices such as General Counsel and Congressional and Public Affairs.
The United States Marshals Service is a bureau within the U.S. Department of Justice and operates under the authority and direction of the Attorney General.
The org chart helps analysts and planners understand reporting lines, operational responsibilities, and how headquarters components support field operations across the federal justice system.
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). United States Marshals Service organizational structure. Creately. Retrieved , from https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/us-marshals-service/"United States Marshals Service Organizational Structure." Creately, April 1, 2026, https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/us-marshals-service/. Accessed .Creately. "United States Marshals Service Organizational Structure." Last modified April 1, 2026. https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/us-marshals-service/.Permanent URL: https://creately.com/org-chart/us-government/us-marshals-service/ · last updated 2026-04-01