The Royal Household are looking for a screening manager to 'provide high level protective security support'
The Royal Household has begun hiring for a new security role specialised in "complex, high-risk or sensitive cases".
Buckingham Palace is now looking to recruit a screening manager, based in the department of the Private Secretary’s Office.
The £35,000-per-year role will be part of the Security Liaison team.
This team helps to "provide high-level protective security support and advice to the Royal Household".
The Palace are searching for a security expert with experience in "screening, vetting or intelligence-led environments".
The chosen candidate will "act as the escalation point for complex, high-risk or sensitive cases".
Key responsibilities include "overseeing security clearances and visitor screening activity, making informed, risk-based decisions to support the operations of the Royal residences," the job description reads.
It adds: "Joining this dedicated team, you’ll lead and support a small team of Screening Officers to ensure every visitor and guest gains the correct clearance in line with Royal Household Security procedures."
The role offers 25 days of annual leave, a pension contribution of 15 per cent and complimentary lunch on site.
LATEST ROYAL NEWS:
"You’ll lead and support a small team of Screening Officers to ensure every visitor and guest gains the correct clearance in line with Royal Household Security procedures."
The successful candidate will ensure "screening operations to high standards of accuracy, compliance and professionalism".
It comes as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, emails released in the tranche of Epstein Files released earlier this year appeared to show, invited paedophile Jeffrey Epstein to Buckingham Palace following his house arrest.
"We could have dinner at Buckingham Palace and lots of privacy," the emails read.
Currently at the Palace, visitors must undergo airport-style security checks.
Guests must remove all metal objects from pockets, and cameras, phones, keys and wallets are advised to be placed inside their bags.






