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Ex-police officer Gareth Keyte was a very happy and successful police officer - a Public Order Commander, Initial Firearms Commander and Senior Investigating Officer, until it was not the trauma of the things he saw in the community that broke him, but how he was treated by his organisation, that made him fall. He had to take time off to deal with his mental health and then had to leave the job altogether - but he was able to climb out of that hole and start a new life with the help of coaching. We speak about mental health in policing, a massive topic at the moment, and the steps you can take to ensure you don't remain stuck in a bad situation. https://www.PoliceScienceDr.com
As the year anniversary of the Dublin Riots nears, Gardaí are taking the unprecedented step to release photos of rioters to the public to identify the suspects. We discuss this move with former Detective Inspector and Senior Investigating Officer, and author Pat Marry.
I welcome Colin "The Real Manhunter" Sutton to the show in this interview episode.Colin spent the last nine years of his three-decade-long police career as a Senior Investigating Officer for the Met Police's Murder Squad. During that time, he and his team caught serial murderer Levi Bellfield and serial rapist Delroy Grant.British TV drama 'Manhunt' was based on those two high-profile investigations, with Martin Clunes starring as Colin.Follow Colin here:Facebook | Colin Sutton - Writer & BroadcasterInstagram | @c0linsutt0nX | @colinsutton***This interview was recorded on February 6, 2024.Join my Patreon community at patreon.com/britishmurders for exclusive perks, including early access to ad-free episodes, bonus content, exciting giveaways, and much more!Do you have a guest request? Please send it to contact@britishmurders.com or fill out a Contact Form at britishmurders.com/contactIntro music:David John Brady - 'Throw Down the Gauntlet'davidjohnbrady.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
I welcome Colin "The Real Manhunter" Sutton to the show in this interview episode. Colin spent the last nine years of his three-decade-long police career as a Senior Investigating Officer for the Met Police's Murder Squad. During that time, he and his team caught serial murderer Levi Bellfield and serial rapist Delroy Grant. British TV drama 'Manhunt' was based on those two high-profile investigations, with Martin Clunes starring as Colin. Follow Colin here: Facebook | Colin Sutton - Writer & Broadcaster Instagram | @c0linsutt0n X | @colinsutton ***This interview was recorded on February 6, 2024. Join my Patreon community at patreon.com/britishmurders for exclusive perks, including early access to ad-free episodes, bonus content, exciting giveaways, and much more! Do you have a guest request? Please send it to contact@britishmurders.com or fill out a Contact Form at britishmurders.com/contact Intro music: David John Brady - 'Throw Down the Gauntlet' davidjohnbrady.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A surge in theft and criminal damage offences last year pushed up crime rates in 76 garda stations to their highest level in a decade. Joining Anton to discuss was Pat Marry Former detective inspector, Senior Investigating Officer and also Mark O'Meara, President of the GRA.
Murder at Lordship; A new book looks at the murder of detective garda Adrian Donohue in January 2013. Pat is joined by the authors to discuss the case, the international manhunt that took place and the longest criminal murder trial in the history of the Irish state. In studio was Robin Schiller, Irish Independent Journalist and also Pat Marry Former detective inspector, Senior Investigating Officer.
Garda Commissioner Drew Harris has directed all uniform gardaí will conduct 30 minutes of road safety activity per shift. To discuss, Shane is joined by Pat Marry, former Detective Inspector and Senior Investigating Officer and author of “The Making of a Detective”.
Garda Commissioner Drew Harris has directed all uniform gardaí will conduct 30 minutes of road safety activity per shift. To discuss, Shane is joined by Pat Marry, former Detective Inspector and Senior Investigating Officer and author of “The Making of a Detective”.
Lauren Layfield introduces Catching the Kingpins on the podcast recommendation podcast - Your Next Podcast. A 6-part true crime podcast documenting the biggest organised crime bust in British policing history. It happens in 2020 when police in France penetrate an encrypted phone network called EncroChat. According to police, the phones were used exclusively by criminals. For over two months, police forces across Europe were reading the secret communications of major league criminal networks. The Metropolitan Police, working with the National Crime Agency and other forces, used this information to uncover the workings of organised crime groups. “It was like being in a room with them and they are talking freely, and they don't see you there,” says DCI Driss Hayoukane, the Senior Investigating Officer who led the Met's EncroChat operation. Police went public about the EncroChat hack in July 2020. This is the first time that the inside story of some of the Met's biggest EncroChat cases has been told to a broadcaster. Talking exclusively to BBC Sounds, police officers reveal how they used the gangsters' messages to uncover arms dealing and expose murder plots as well as major drug trafficking and money laundering operations.You can Follow Catching the Kingpins and listen to all of the episodes on BBC Sounds, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts.
I welcome Ryan Ogilvie to the show in this interview episode to discuss his new podcast series Who is the Cheese Wire Killer?At around 8 pm on September 29, 1983, local taxi driver George Murdoch picked up a fare from the New Marcliffe Hotel on Queens Road, Aberdeen. A short time later, he was found dead by the roadside. He was the victim of a brutal and cruel murder.On the fortieth anniversary of the murder, Ryan released the first episode of his five-part series focusing on the case. In those five episodes, Ryan speaks to George's family, friends, and criminal psychology experts.He also speaks to the Senior Investigating Officer and the forensic scientists at the centre of the investigation as he asks, “Who is the Cheese Wire Killer?”If you have any information relating to this case, please get in touch with the Police (UK 101), Crimestoppers (UK 0800 555 111) or the below Facebook page:https://www.facebook.com/Appeal-for-Information-Aberdeen-Taxi-Driver-Murder-1983-George-Murdoch-100793279019630You can listen to Who is the Cheese Wire Killer? here:Apple Podcasts | Who is the Cheese Wire Killer? Spotify | Who is the Cheese Wire Killer?***This interview was recorded on December 5, 2023.Join my Patreon community at patreon.com/britishmurders for exclusive perks, including early access to ad-free episodes, bonus content, exciting giveaways, and much more!The video version of this episode can be viewed at youtube.com/@britishmurders. Remember to subscribe and ring the notification bell to stay up-to-date with my latest releases.Do you have a guest request? Please send it to contact@britishmurders.com or fill out a Contact Form at britishmurders.com/contactIntro music:David John Brady - 'Throw Down the Gauntlet'davidjohnbrady.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
I welcome Ryan Ogilvie to the show in this interview episode to discuss his new podcast series Who is the Cheese Wire Killer? At around 8 pm on September 29, 1983, local taxi driver George Murdoch picked up a fare from the New Marcliffe Hotel on Queens Road, Aberdeen. A short time later, he was found dead by the roadside. He was the victim of a brutal and cruel murder. On the fortieth anniversary of the murder, Ryan released the first episode of his five-part series focusing on the case. In those five episodes, Ryan speaks to George's family, friends, and criminal psychology experts. He also speaks to the Senior Investigating Officer and the forensic scientists at the centre of the investigation as he asks, “Who is the Cheese Wire Killer?” If you have any information relating to this case, please get in touch with the Police (UK 101), Crimestoppers (UK 0800 555 111) or the below Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Appeal-for-Information-Aberdeen-Taxi-Driver-Murder-1983-George-Murdoch-100793279019630 You can listen to Who is the Cheese Wire Killer? here: Apple Podcasts | Who is the Cheese Wire Killer? Spotify | Who is the Cheese Wire Killer? ***This interview was recorded on December 5, 2023. Join my Patreon community at patreon.com/britishmurders for exclusive perks, including early access to ad-free episodes, bonus content, exciting giveaways, and much more! Video versions of my episodes can be found at youtube.com/@britishmurders. Remember to subscribe and ring the notification bell to stay up-to-date with my latest releases. Do you have a guest request? Please send it to contact@britishmurders.com or fill out a Contact Form at britishmurders.com/contact Intro music: David John Brady - 'Throw Down the Gauntlet' davidjohnbrady.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Caroline Goode served for 33 years in the Metropolitan Police in London. She retired as a Detective Superintendent in the Counter-Terrorism Command after spending ten years leading more than 100 complex murder investigations. One of those investigations, the so-called honour killing of a young Iraqi Kurdish woman by her family, was to become a life changer for Caroline. This investigation, which began as a simple missing person's report, was particularly challenging and complex. After the Banaz case, she trained thousands of police officers nationally and internationally in Honour Based Violence Awareness and was awarded the Queens Policing Medal for her work in 2012. Caroline joins me today to detail the damage that honour-based violence still does to women in the UK and explains her role in the shocking murder of 20-year-old Banaz Mahmod, which was subsequently dramatised in the TV series Honour starring Keeley Hawes. She shares her experience of joining the Metropolitan Police as an 18-year-old woman and some of the challenges she faced at the start of her career. Caroline also discusses why she looked to progress her career in the Metropolitan Police in complex investigative work and why she has always preferred to work in teams that support victims. "We need to keep raising awareness of honour-based violence about it in whichever format we can - there needs to be a wholly consistent approach, or we're going to end up in a situation where these murders continue to happen ." - Caroline Goode Today on The Community Safety Podcast: How Caroline's interest in becoming a detective began with a traumatic experience Why she fought to get maternity regulations changed in the Metropolitan Police Caroline's first role as a Senior Investigating Officer and the investigation that changed her life The story of Caroline's involvement in the horrific Banaz Mahmod case and the eureka moment that eventually helped her team to bring her murderers to justice The difficulty of extraditing two of Banaz's killers from Iraqui Kurdistan and how Caroline made legal history during the process
Michael Lynch, Safeguarding Consultant and former Senior Investigating Officer with An Garda Siochana National Protective Services Bureau discusses the importance of safeguarding for children following the conviction of a Swim Ireland coach for the sexual exploitation of children.
An Garda Síochána's upper age limit is set to rise significantly in a bid to boost recruitment, potentially reaching 45-50 years of age. With reaction Pat was joined on the show by Pat Marry Former Detective Inspector and Senior Investigating Officer and Author of 'The Making Of A Detective'
Today we are going across the pond to England chatting with Detective Superintendent Julie Mackay and Investigative Journalist and Podcaster Robert Murphy. Julie Mackay retired from policing as Detective Superintendent (head of homicide teams) after a distinguished career spanning 32 years. Trained as a review officer, Senior Investigating Officer, and with a passion for putting victims first, she has continued to work in arenas that strive for improvement. Julie led the 30-year-old cold case investigation that identified the killer of Melanie Road 31 years after her murder.From breaking exclusive news stories which resonate around the world to in-depth coverage of complex criminal court cases, award-winning Robert Murphy is at the cutting edge of television news journalism. Rob is the presenter/producer of ‘Behind the Crimes with Robert Murphy' podcast.In today's episode we discuss:· Julie's beginnings in law enforcement.· The equipment and uniform that a female British Police officer was issued in the late 1980s.· Julie's distinguished law enforcement career where she retired as a Detective Superintendent. · Julie leading the investigative team that solved a 30-year-old rape/murder case of Melanie Road.· Robert and Julie's co-writing the book, “To Hunt a Killer.”· Robert's process of interviewing Julie during the writing of the book. · The amazing speed with which Robert wrote the book. Check out; To Hunt a Killer: The gripping true crime story solving the Melanie Road cold case.Visit Julie at her website.Visit Rob at his website.Check out Field Training (Brew City Blues Book 1)!!Enjoy the Cops and Writer's book series.Please visit the Cops and Writers website.If you have a question for the sarge, hit him up at his email.Join the fun at the Cops and Writers Facebook groupDo you want to write crime stories that are accurate and believable, but lack first-hand experience in law enforcement? Join Cop Camp, the Cops and Writers Interactive Conference, and experience what real police officers and detectives do through hands-on activities this June 1st – the 4th at the Fox Valley police academy in Appleton, Wisconsin. Register now at premeditatedfiction.com/copcamp2023 and take your crime writing to the next level. Do you enjoy gritty, action-packed real-life police dramas to get your fill of blood, heartache, and cop humor, and maybe even a little romance?I have partnered up with Michael Anderle and we have released a new crime fiction series called “Brew City Blues.” If you're a fan of Hill Street Blues, Southland, or Bosch you're going to love Brew City Blues! Brew City Blues is now live! https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0BLR7FX27Support the show
On the evening of April 22, 1993, 18-year-old Stephen Lawrence died from injuries after he was allegedly beaten by a group of five teenagers. His mother, Doreen, wanted answers from local police, but instead, she got excuses. Then a new Senior Investigating Officer took over the case, and he spent years trying to prove what really happened that fateful night. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Michael Lynch, Safeguarding Consultant and former Senior Investigating Officer with the National Child Protection Unit, discusses calls for new powers to ensure child safeguarding procedures are implemented.
Ash Farrington spent thirty years in policing, retiring as a Detective Chief Inspector. He achieved national accreditations as a hostage negotiator, Senior Investigating Officer and Public Safety and Public Order commander. Ash then qualified as a leadership coach and has considerable coaching experience and leadership development that has included working with the British Army, HM Prison Service, Fire and Rescue Service as well as with colleagues in the Police Service. This episode comes from an interview I had with Ash for the Sporting Edge Members Club. It was a truly enlightening conversation about compassionate leadership and how we can all be more kind. Ash talks openly about his own battle with clinical depression, and how we can look out for warning signs. If you'd like to join the Sporting Edge Members Club to get 24/7 access to over 900 insights to accelerate your personal and professional development, apply the discount code PODCAST100 in the checkout https://www.sportingedge.com/membership/ (here) to get your first month free. Links mentioned: Learn more about Ash's work here https://farringtonandkind.com/ (Farrington & Kind) Connect with Jeremy Contact hello@sportingedge.com LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremysnape/ (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremysnape/) Twitter https://twitter.com/thesportingedge (https://twitter.com/thesportingedge) Facebook http://www.facebook.com/TheSportingEdge (http://www.facebook.com/TheSportingEdge) Website https://www.sportingedge.com/ (https://www.sportingedge.com/)
This week I had the privilege of interviewing one of my policing heroes, Ex-Detective Chief Superintendent Hamish Campbell. Hamish spent nearly 40 years in the Met police, most of that time investigating serious crime. He came under intense media scrutiny as the Senior Investigating Officer in the Jill Dando murder enquiry in 1999, which resulted in the conviction of Barry George. George was subsequently cleared of the murder, which today remains unsolved. Hamish reviewed numerous high-profile investigations that resulted in the conviction of some very dangerous offenders, not least Delroy Grant, who was found guilty of dozens of burglaries and rapes of elderly and vulnerable victims.
Caroline Goode QPM Caroline Goode served for 33 years in the Metropolitan Police in London. She retired as a Detective Superintendent in the Counter-Terrorism Command after spending ten years leading more than 100 complex murder investigations. One of those investigations, the so-called honour killing of a young Iraqi Kurdish woman by her family, was to become a life changer for Caroline. This investigation, which began as a simple missing person's report, was particularly challenging and complex. After the Banaz case, she trained thousands of police officers nationally and internationally in Honour Based Violence Awareness and was awarded the Queens Policing Medal for her work in 2012. Caroline joins me today to detail the damage that honour-based violence still does to women in the UK and explains her role in the shocking murder of 20-year-old Banaz Mahmod, which was subsequently dramatised in the TV series Honour starring Keeley Hawes. She shares her experience of joining the Metropolitan Police as an 18-year-old woman and some of the challenges she faced at the start of her career. Caroline also discusses why she looked to progress her career in the Metropolitan Police in complex investigative work and why she has always preferred to work in teams that support victims. "We need to keep raising awareness of honour-based violence about it in whichever format we can - there needs to be a wholly consistent approach, or we're going to end up in a situation where these murders continue to happen ." - Caroline Goode Today on The Community Safety Podcast: How Caroline's interest in becoming a detective began with a traumatic experience Why she fought to get maternity regulations changed in the Metropolitan Police Caroline's first role as a Senior Investigating Officer and the investigation that changed her life The story of Caroline's involvement in the horrific Banaz Mahmod case and the eureka moment that eventually helped her team to bring her murderers to justice The difficulty of extraditing two of Banaz's killers from Iraqui Kurdistan and how Caroline made legal history during the process Connect with Caroline Goode: Honour: Achieving Justice for Banaz Mahmod by Caroline Goode Caroline Goode Website Caroline Goode on Twitter Connect with The Community Safety Podcast: The Community Safety Podcast Website The Community Safety Podcast on Facebook The Community Safety Podcast on Twitter
Gardaí may soon have the right to use facial recognition technology to tackle serious crimes. Justice Minister Helen McEntee plans to bring the legislation before the cabinet, but would such policing technology make Irish citizens more safe, or less? To discuss further Shane spoke to Pat Marry, Former Detective Inspector and Senior Investigating Officer, and author of “The Making of a Detective” and also Elizabeth Farries, Assistant Professor of Digital Policy at UCD join us on Newstalk Breakfast this morning.
Gardaí may soon have the right to use facial recognition technology to tackle serious crimes. Justice Minister Helen McEntee plans to bring the legislation before the cabinet, but would such policing technology make Irish citizens more safe, or less? To discuss further Shane spoke to Pat Marry, Former Detective Inspector and Senior Investigating Officer, and author of “The Making of a Detective” and also Elizabeth Farries, Assistant Professor of Digital Policy at UCD join us on Newstalk Breakfast this morning.
Conor Gallagher, Crime correspondent, The Irish Times, Pat Marry, former Detective Inspector and Senior Investigating Officer and author of ‘The Making of a Detective', Paul Healy, Chief Reporter, The Irish Daily
Ex Met Detective Stuart Gibbon talks about his life as real Senior Investigating Officer, the work he does now helping crime writers with their novels and which police series gets his thumbs up as most authentic....
Ex Met Detective Stuart Gibbon talks about his life as real Senior Investigating Officer, the work he does now helping crime writers with their novels and which police series gets his thumbs up as most authentic....
Dream job or killer career? Join the experts at Staffordshire University as we dive into the world of UK homicide investigation, and explore the cases that defined the career of one particular Senior Investigating Officer.
Visit our website https://psycho-killer.co for exclusive videos, photos, articles, and transcripts.Michael Benneman Sams was one of life's losers, a little man with big, bad ideas. He snatched his victims and held them to ransom locked in a wheelie bin. Birmingham estate agent Stephanie Slater walked free when her employers paid £175,000. Julie Dart, a teenager from Leeds, wasn't so lucky. She escaped from the wheelie bin, triggering Sams's silent alarm. He murdered her before she could break out of his workshop in Newark, Nottinghamshire, and dumped her body in a field in Lincolnshire. But the police caught up with Sams. His ex-wife and son had long memories. When they recognised him on BBC Crimewatch they were quick to turn him in. Sams, now 79, will die in prison.This podcast features an exclusive interview with Senior Investigating Officer, Detective Chief Superintendent (retired) Bob Taylor of West Yorkshire Police.The Six O'clock Knock is a Psycho Killer production.Transcript[MUSIC] Hello and welcome to the Six O'Clock Knock. I'm Simon Ford, a journalist and broadcaster. And I'm Jacques Morrell a former major crime detective who just can't hang up his boots!Put us together and what have you got? A series of insightful, provocative and challenging new ‘takes' on cold cases and landmark investigations. Jacques spent 30 years on the force, and I've spent as long chasing scoops and scribbling in courtrooms. About a year ago we shook hands, sat down and started comparing notebooks. And I can honestly say that deciphering Simon's shorthand is the most difficult piece of detective work I've ever done.Read more: https://bit.ly/michael-sams-transcript
Part 2 of 2.An emotional interview with Sgt Paul Gosling and Dave Grimstead joins in after, discussing Charles Horvath-Allan, and what could have happened to him back in 1989.Charles was only 20 years old when he disappeared in Tiny Tent Town, BC, Canada. He would have been 53 years old this year. There is speculation Charles was murdered and placed in Lake Okanagan, BC. We are all saddened to see the pain that Denise Horvath-Allan has suffered in the last 32 years, searching for her only child, Charles. Denise, you are in our hearts. Sergeant Paul Gosling has been a 24 year member of the RCMP and has been in the Major Crime area of policing from 2008 to 2009 and then since 2011. He spent his first five years of policing in Fort St John, BC and the remainder have been in the Kelowna area. Paul was previously with the Canadian Navy for 10 years, stationed in both Halifax, NS and Esquimalt, BC. He is in charge of Charles Horvath-Allan's case.Sergeant Paul Gosling 250-470-6338 Crime Stoppers 1-800-222-TIPS (8477)Denise Horvath Allan – Charles's mom in England: Tel UK 011 (44) 208 332 6776email: deniseallan@hotmail.co.uk Dave Grimstead is a former Detective Inspector and Senior Investigating Officer with Avon and Somerset Police and UK National Crime Agency. Dave developed a cold system for missing and unidentified people whilst researching for his Masters in International Criminal Justice. The idea was presented at the International Conference Missing Children and Adults 2019 at Liverpool University. Following the conference, together with former colleagues and specialists from UK universities, Locate International was founded with a mission to support police and families at no cost to them.Locate International https://locate.international/missing-persons/charles-horvath-allan/Additional Information was mentioned by Sgt Paul Gosling in this podcast episode about Dana Bradley who was tragically murdered. The killer has not been caught.~Dana Bradley disappeared on the evening of 14 December 1981, while hitchhiking on Topsail Road in St. John's. She had been at a friend's home after school and was on her way home to a family birthday party. When she did not arrive, the family reported her missing to the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary.[1] An eyewitness reported seeing Bradley getting into a car with a male driver.[2] Bradley's body was found in a wooded area on the Maddox Cove Road south of St. John's four days after she disappeared. Her skull had been fractured by a blunt object and she had been sexually assaulted.[3] The body was laid out in "burial fashion" with her schoolbooks tucked under her arm.[1] The subsequent investigation has been described as (then) "the most expensive and exhaustive murder investigation in Canadian history". Hundreds of people were interviewed; thousands of tips were received and investigated. More than 800 cars were examined in the weeks following Bradley's disappearance. The initial task force was composed of 35 full-time investigators from the RCMP and the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary.[4]Dana was a personal friend of mine (Paul Gosling) as we grew up as neighbours, selling lemonade, riding bikes, going to the traveling fair. We were quite close, until she moved to another neighbourhood when she was around 13 years old.If you have any information about Charles Horvath-Allan or Dana Bradley, please contact us. Thank you.
Today's episode focuses on an unsolved murder case that has spanned half a century. On 27 March 1971, a body was discovered in a shallow grave beside the River Trent in Burton. 50 years on and the murder of “Fred” remains unsolved. We're joined by DCI Dan Ison, who's the Senior Investigating Officer having picked up the case in 2017.Ever wondered how the police go about keeping your county safe or do you ever just want to know why we make certain decisions? Staffordshire Police has introduced The Beat Podcast to help give you an insight into how we police and prevent crime in our beautiful county through the eyes of those on the front line.Hosted by former LBC reporter turned Staffordshire Police Communications Officer, Tom Bushell.Have any questions? Drop us an email at thebeatpodcast@staffordshire.pnn.police.uk
In this episode we talk with: Peter Barnes - Head of Financial Crime Investigations at Standard Chartered and Chair of the Joint International Money Laundering Task Force's Modern Slavery Working Group. Prior to taking on investigations roles in the financial sector, Pete served 18 years in the Metropolitan Police Force. Nick Dale - Superintendent with West Midlands Police. He has recently had a variety of roles including being the Local Responsible Officer for Birmingham, a role designed to tackle issues of violence relating to gangs and organised crime. He was also the Senior Investigating Officer for Operation Fort, the UK's largest modern slavery investigation, involving about 400 victims, which has led to eight offenders receiving 55 ½ year prison sentences so far. Barry Koch - an internationally recognized expert in anti-money laundering and financial crime risk management who held senior legal and compliance positions at JP Morgan Chase, Western Union, and American Express.