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Isle of Man Constabulary

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Isle of Man Constabulary
Meoiryn-Shee Ellan Vannin
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Agency overview
FormedSeptember, 1863
Annual budget£15 million[1]
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionIsle of Man
Isle of Man Constabulary area
Size572 square kilometres (221 sq mi)
Population80,000
General nature
Operational structure
HeadquartersDouglas
Sworn members200
Agency executive
Divisions4
Facilities
Stations4
Website
www.iompolice.im

The Isle of Man Constabulary (Template:Lang-gv) is the national police service of the Isle of Man, an island of 80,000 inhabitants, situated approximately equidistant from Northern Ireland, Wales, Scotland and England.

Structures and deployment

The force has about 236 officers in its establishment. As the Isle of Man is not a part of the United Kingdom, the Constabulary is responsible to the Minister of Home Affairs of the Isle of Man Government. Nevertheless, the service volunteers itself for inspection by Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) for England and Wales.

The force is split into four Neighbourhood Policing Teams (NPTs). Each NPT is controlled by an inspector who has established a partnership with the local community to help solve issues affecting the local area.

Neighbourhood Policing Teams[2]
Team Parishes etc. covered
Northern Ramsey, Andreas, Bride, Ballaugh, Lezayre, Maughold, Jurby, Lonan, Laxey
Western Patrick, German, Michael, Peel, Marown
Southern Castletown, Port St Mary, Port Erin, Malew, Arbory, Rushen, Santon
Eastern Borough of Douglas, Braddan, Onchan

There is a Criminal Investigation Department which includes the CID, Public Protection and Pro-active Teams

A small team of intelligence and drug trafficking officers exists dedicated to this. Drug trafficking is an assigned matter to the Isle of Man Customs and Excise.

An Operational Support Group which includes operational Firearms and Training, Public Order officers, a Search Team, Negotiators and Post Incident Managers.

A major event for the force is the annual TT races.

The constabulary's headquarters are in Douglas. The present Chief Constable is Gary Roberts.

Uniform

The distinctive white Isle of Man police helmet.

In terms of uniform, the force looks very similar to police in the United Kingdom, apart from the Isle of Man custodian helmets worn by male constables and sergeants. White helmets were introduced in 1960 as a summer alternative to the older black helmets (partly for tourism reasons).[3] White helmets were used as a summer option in other police forces (including Brighton, Southend-on-Sea and Swansea Borough Police forces; Peterborough City Police; the Metropolitan Police's band; and the New Zealand Police), but this practice ceased in the UK in 1969 and in New Zealand in the 1990s. The white helmet is now worn year round by officers on foot patrol. Officers on mobile patrol tend to wear peaked caps.

Officers of the rank of sergeant and above may carry a "signalling stick" when on foot patrol. This is in effect an additional rank indicator. Until very recently constables "acting up" in the rank of sergeant were referred to as "carrying the stick". If the "acting" was only short term, the stick was often the only indicator of their additional responsibilities.

Social media presence

The Isle of Man Constabulary have started to use social media, predominantly Twitter.

Controversies

During the tenure of Mike Culverhouse, the force was involved in the Manx Bugging Scandal, and almost all senior officers except the Chief Constable were either suspended, retired or dismissed due to the uncovering of widespread bugging.

Rank structure

The rank structure of the Isle of Man Constabulary follows the practice of United Kingdom county (as opposed to metropolitan) territorial police forces, except that there are no ranks of chief superintendent or assistant chief constable. There are usually one superintendent and three chief inspectors, who take responsibility, respectively, for local neighbourhood policing, island-wide policing, and motorsport policing. The last of these largely covers the TT races and associated motorsports activities.

Chief Officers

  • Chief Constable Gary Roberts, 2013 – present
  • Chief Constable Mike Langdon, 2008–2013
  • Chief Constable Mike Culverhouse, 1999–2007
    • Deputy Chief Constable Mike Langdon, 2005–2007
    • Deputy Chief Constable Neil Kinrade, 2000–2005
    • Deputy Chief Constable Alan Cretney 1995-2000
  • Chief Constable Robin Oake, 1986–1999
    • Deputy Chief Constable Alan Cretney 1995-2000
  • Chief Constable Frank Weedon, 1972–1986
  • Chief Constable Christopher Beaty-Pownall, 1955–1972
  • Chief Constable Major John Young, 1936–1954
  • Chief Constable Colonel H W Madoc MVO, 1911–1936
    • Deputy Chief Constable John Thomas Quilliam, -1920
  • Chief Constable William Freeth, MVO 1888–1911
  • Chief Constable Lieutenant Colonel William Paul, 1878–1888
    • Deputy Chief Constable William Boyde
    • Deputy Chief Constable John Cain
    • Deputy Chief Constable Thomas Cringle
    • Deputy Chief Constable Richard Duke
    • Deputy Chief Constable Charles Joshua Faragher
    • Deputy Chief Constable William Faragher

Emergency services on the Isle of Man

See also

References