Saturday, 26 July 2014

ARE TERESA MAY, DAVID CAMERON AND THE QUEEN ALL BLIND IDIOTS OR COVER UPPERS OF INSTITUTIONAL CHILD ABUSE?

MIKE CUNNINGHAM HAS COVERED UP INSTITUTIONAL CHILD ABUSE IN STAFFORDSHIRE AND HE HAS ALSO COVERED UP THE TAKING OF DISABLED CHILDREN FROM THEIR SPECIAL SCHOOL TO DRAKE HALL PRISON FOR PE LESSONS WITHOUT PARENTS KNOWLEDGE AND PERMISSION.
WHY IS OUR GOVERNMENT DELIBERATLY PLACING A CORRUPT POLICE OFFICER IN CHANGE OR OVERSEEING THE ENTIRE COUNTRY'S POLICE FORCE?


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Chief Constable Mike Cunningham quits Staffordshire Police to take up £185k-a-year role overseeing nationwide policing


By The Sentinel | Posted: July 26, 2014

By RICHARD AULT




PASTURES NEW: Chief Constable Mike Cunningham has been appointed Her Majesty's Inspector of Constabulary.

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CHIEF Constable Mike Cunningham is leaving Staffordshire Police to take a new £185,971 job overseeing nationwide policing.

Home Secretary Theresa May announced yesterday that Mr Cunningham had been appointed Her Majesty's Inspector of Constabulary.

He was selected following a rigorous recruitment process which included approval by the Prime Minister and the Queen.

Mr Cunningham – who will be responsible for checking up on forces across the country – said: "I am honoured to have been appointed.


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"I am looking forward to a new challenging and exciting role.

"I leave Staffordshire Police very proud of the men and women who keep people safe and reassured and I thank them for their outstanding work. I look to use the privileges and experiences I have enjoyed as a police officer to assist me in my future work."

Mr Cunningham, a former teacher, joined Lancashire Police in 1987 and rose through the ranks over the next 20 years, becoming Deputy Chief Constable in 2007.

He was appointed Chief Constable of Staffordshire Police in September, 2009 drawing a salary of £139,931 although his pay, including pension contributions, amounted to £183,741.

He is replacing Roger Baker, who has been HM Inspector of Constabulary since September 2009. He will be one of four people to hold the post.

Announcing Mr Cunningham's appointment, Mrs May said: "Mike brings a wealth of expertise and experience from his career in the police that will be invaluable in his new role and I look forward to working with him in the future."

HM Chief Inspector of Constabulary Thomas Winsor added: "I look forward to Mike joining the Inspectorate and to working with him. He joins at an exciting and demanding time, as HMIC undergoes a significant expansion of its workload as we design and carry out our programme of annual all-force inspections on police efficiency."

Mr Cunningham's deputy Jayne Sawyer will take over as Staffordshire Police's interim chief constable.

Staffordshire Police and Crime Commissioner Matthew Ellis said: "While I am sad that Mike is going, it is a great opportunity for him personally and also for the policing landscape nationally because of his extensive experience and expertise.

"Mike is an excellent chief constable and I've thoroughly enjoyed working so closely with him during the last 18 months."


Read more: http://www.stokesentinel.co.uk/Chief-Constable-Mike-Cunningham-quits/story-21940548-detail/story.html#ixzz38ZEPxXTX
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4 comments:

Zoompad said...

Greater Manchester police chief Mike Todd had affairs with five women in his own force

Mike Todd, the police chief found dead on a Welsh mountain, had affairs with five women in his force but his tangled love life did not interfere with his work, an official police inquiry has found.

Mike Todd was sending up to 30 text messages a day just before his death Photo: CAVENDISH

By Richard Edwards, Crime Correspondent

2:08PM GMT 23 Jan 2009

An investigation studied the chief constable's liaisons with 38 women during his six years at Greater Manchester police, some of which were relationships and others "associations".


Although he was sending up to 30 text messages a day to women just before his death, it concluded that his private life did not affect his ability to do his job.


However, leaked details of the report suggest that Todd's complicated love life could have presented a threat to national security, because he may have been potentially "vulnerable" to a deliberate honey-trap.


Zoompad said...

A source said: "Mr Todd's death raises questions about whether regular vetting of chief constables should go on. Mr Todd was potentially vulnerable - he liked women. If an organisation used one to get to him that could have done a lot of damage."


Todd, 50, a married father of three, was in turmoil at the time of his death last March after becoming convinced that his three-year affair with businesswoman Angie Robinson, the head of Manchester Chamber of Commerce, was about to be exposed. An inquest in October found that he had died of exposure on Mount Snowdon.



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The report, which is due to be published next week, was carried out by Sir Paul Scott-Lee, Chief Constable of West Midlands Police who was one of four interviewed to become the new chief of Scotland Yard.

All the members of Todd's command team in Manchester were interviewed and claimed they were unaware of his affairs with staff.

The promotion of several women officers while Mr Todd was in charge of GMP was also looked at scrutinised by Sir Paul's team but there was no evidence of any breach of protocol.

The investigation is also understood to have found no evidence that Mr Todd used force equipment inappropriately - such as phones or vehicles, despite him being an obsessive user of text messages. Between March 1 last year and March 11,

when his body was found near the summit of Snowdon, he sent 319 text messages to several people, mostly women.

Mr Todd was an assistant commissioner with the Metropolitan Police when he landed the GMP job in October 2002. His wife Carolyn and three children lived in Nottinghamshire and continued to do so when he moved to Manchester.

The final report is expected to make two recommendations: that a better support network should be available so that officers who feel under stress can get help; and that more consideration should be given to the needs of senior officers when they are promoted and relocated from one force to another.

The inquiry team interviewed 150 people over 10 months. All of the women within GMP with whom Mr Todd had affairs declined to be interviewed by investigators.

Russell Bernstein, executive director of the GMP Authority which commissioned the report, said: "The Authority is currently awaiting delivery of Sir Paul's report. It is inappropriate to pass comment about the report contents at this time as we are not in possession of the report findings. We anticipate receipt of the report on January 30."

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Zoompad said...

LETS LOOK AT THIS IN MORE DETAIL:

A source said: "Mr Todd's death raises questions about whether regular vetting of chief constables should go on. Mr Todd was potentially vulnerable - he liked women. If an organisation used one to get to him that could have done a lot of damage."

WHO WAS THE SOURCE? ARE WE NOT ENTITLED TO KNOW THE ACTUAL NAME OF THE SOURCE?

Zoompad said...

"The inquiry team interviewed 150 people over 10 months. All of the women within GMP with whom Mr Todd had affairs declined to be interviewed by investigators"

THAT IN ITSELF STINKS, AND THOSE WOMEN SHOULD ALL BE INVESTIGATED IN AN OPEN COURT