POLICE DETAILS
Lincolnshire Police - Sleaford Town Neighbourhood

Lincolnshire Police Information

Thames Valley Police

Lincolnshire Police has not provided any force information at this time.

Sleaford Town Neighbourhood

Lincolnshire Police has not provided any neighbourhood information at this time.

Police Force Map - Lincolnshire Police

Neighbourhood Map - Sleaford Town

Contact Details

Lincolnshire Police https://lincs.police.uk/
Lincolnshire Police https://lincs.police.uk/
Lincolnshire Police https://lincs.police.uk/
Lincolnshire Police https://lincs.police.uk/
Lincolnshire Police https://lincs.police.uk/
Lincolnshire Police https://lincs.police.uk/
Lincolnshire Police https://lincs.police.uk/
Lincolnshire Police https://lincs.police.uk/

Senior Officer Details

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Chris Davison (Assistant Chief Constable)

Chris joined Lincolnshire Police in 1997, having previously served as a volunteer cadet there between 1991 and 1994.

Chris has served his entire career in the county, both in uniform and as a detective, and more recently has been the Head of Crime, the C/Supt in charge of the East of the county as well as a secondment to Lincolnshire County Council as the Assistant Director for Public Protection. He is currently the Assistant Chief Constable for Local Policing and Partnerships.

Chris holds joint honours in English Literature and Philosophy from the University of Leeds, and an MSc in Leadership and Management from Warwick Business School.

Outside of work, Chris is a fervent follower of Wolverhampton Wanderers football club, an aficionado of heavy metal and is a ludologist.

Chris lives in the south of Lincolnshire with his wife and two sons.

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Chris Haward (Chief Constable)

Chris joined the force as Chief Constable in December 2020.

His previous role was head of the East Midlands Special Operations Unit (EMSOU) and has led on major crime investigations, tackling serious and organised crime, covert policing and counter terrorism.

In his time at EMSOU, the largest police collaboration in the UK, the unit saw an increase in operations completed, arrests made and convictions secured.

Chris was raised in Zambia and Botswana before returning to Yorkshire for secondary school. He has a degree and a Masters from Leicester University.

He joined Leicestershire Police in 1991 where he worked his way up from beat bobby to Detective Inspector through to Chief Superintendent.

He was the Gold Commander for Leicester City Football Club for several years, including the Premiership winning season, and spent three years with Interpol tackling drug trafficking across the globe.

In 2016 Mr Haward moved to Derbyshire Constabulary as Assistant Chief Constable and took over EMSOU in early 2018 in the rank of Deputy Chief Constable.

He is married with two children.

+
Jason Harwin (Deputy Chief Constable)

Jason is the Deputy Chief Constable.

He was appointed from Cleveland Police in June 2019 where he was Assistant Chief Constable for two years.

Prior to this he worked at South Yorkshire Police for 25 years in a variety of roles with a focus on local policing and partnership working. Jason was the force’s Head of Business change and a Chief Superintendent for Rotherham during the child sexual exploitation investigations, where he worked to help rebuild confidence in the local authorities.

Jason is currently a strategic commander for firearms incidents and the National Police Chief’s Council lead for Drugs.

Follow Jason on Twitter at @DCCHarwin

+
Kerrin Wilson (Assistant Chief Constable)

Kerrin was appointed Assistant Chief Constable in July 2018, having previously been Head of Cleveland & Durham (Police) Special Operations Unit.

Kerrin started her policing career in 1992 with Northumbria Police.  She did the bulk of her service with Cleveland Constabulary before moving to North Yorkshire Police on promotion to Chief Inspector and then joining Durham Constabulary in 2013 as a Superintendent. 

Kerrin has a background in a variety of disciplines at all levels of her career from operational uniform, CID and specialist roles. This has included Head of Tasking & Co-ordinating Command (Media, Resourcing, Intelligence, Research & Analysis, Control Rooms); Safeguarding; Volume Crime; Diversity Unit; Local Area Command; Neighbourhood Policing, and serving on secondment to the Foreign & Commonwealth Office as the Director for Training the Iraqi Police based in Baghdad.

Kerrin is responsible locally for Crime and Operations which includes the Force Control Room and Criminal Justice.  Kerrin is also the East Midlands Regional lead for Victims and Witnesses, ANPR and Roads Policing. 

Kerrin has also undertaken regional and national responsibilities in the hostage negotiating world and has been deployed internationally in this capacity both on operational deployments and reviewing New South Wales Police effectiveness in a terrorist siege.

She is a keen advocate of the equality agenda, in particular supporting B.A.M.E & Women’s aspirations both within the police service and wider afield.

Since becoming a Chief Officer, Kerrin has taken on a number of National and Regional roles;

  • National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) Lead for Professionalising the Investigative Process (PIP);
  • NPCC Lead for Progression and Leadership under the Race Religion and Belief portfolio;
  • Police Steering Committee for Cumberland Lodge, a national charity working as a ‘think tank’ to encourage dialogue and debate for causes and effects of social division.
  • Board Member for JUST Lincolnshire, a single equality organisation which aims to make a difference to the lives of people from all backgrounds by championing equality, tackling discrimination and celebrating the richly diverse makeup of the County.  
  • Member of the Institute of Directors (IOD) as Ambassador for Criminal Justice and Policing.

Kerrin is married, no children, a million god children, loves life, adventure, travel and music. 

Follow Kerrin on Twitter at @KerrinWilson999

+
Sharon Clark (Chief Finance Officer)

Sharon is originally from Manchester and moved to Lincolnshire in 1992.

She graduated from Oxford with a degree in Chemistry and trained as a Chartered Accountant and qualified in 1994.

Since then, she has worked predominantly in the public sector, holding senior finance posts in the NHS, local authority and education sectors.

At the Radiotherapy Centre at Lincoln County Hospital, as Assistant Director of Finance, she took the finance lead on a project to secure £10M of Department of Health funding to transfer Radiotherapy to a new purpose-built facility at Lincoln County Hospital.

Sharon has worked on the merger of Lincoln, Boston and Grantham acute trusts to form the United Lincolnshire NHS Trust.  As a member of the Lincoln Executive team and the merger team, she was responsible for establishing the budgets for the merged organisation.

She has also been involved in a number of significant capital projects whilst at City of Lincoln Council providing financial advice from initial viability and funding, through to project completion and ongoing service consequences.

+
Chris Davison (Assistant Chief Constable)

Chris joined Lincolnshire Police in 1997, having previously served as a volunteer cadet there between 1991 and 1994.

Chris has served his entire career in the county, both in uniform and as a detective, and more recently has been the Head of Crime, the C/Supt in charge of the East of the county as well as a secondment to Lincolnshire County Council as the Assistant Director for Public Protection. He is currently the Assistant Chief Constable for Local Policing and Partnerships.

Chris holds joint honours in English Literature and Philosophy from the University of Leeds, and an MSc in Leadership and Management from Warwick Business School.

Outside of work, Chris is a fervent follower of Wolverhampton Wanderers football club, an aficionado of heavy metal and is a ludologist.

Chris lives in the south of Lincolnshire with his wife and two sons.

+
Chris Haward (Chief Constable)

Chris joined the force as Chief Constable in December 2020.

His previous role was head of the East Midlands Special Operations Unit (EMSOU) and has led on major crime investigations, tackling serious and organised crime, covert policing and counter terrorism.

In his time at EMSOU, the largest police collaboration in the UK, the unit saw an increase in operations completed, arrests made and convictions secured.

Chris was raised in Zambia and Botswana before returning to Yorkshire for secondary school. He has a degree and a Masters from Leicester University.

He joined Leicestershire Police in 1991 where he worked his way up from beat bobby to Detective Inspector through to Chief Superintendent.

He was the Gold Commander for Leicester City Football Club for several years, including the Premiership winning season, and spent three years with Interpol tackling drug trafficking across the globe.

In 2016 Mr Haward moved to Derbyshire Constabulary as Assistant Chief Constable and took over EMSOU in early 2018 in the rank of Deputy Chief Constable.

He is married with two children.

+
Jason Harwin (Deputy Chief Constable)

Jason is the Deputy Chief Constable.

He was appointed from Cleveland Police in June 2019 where he was Assistant Chief Constable for two years.

Prior to this he worked at South Yorkshire Police for 25 years in a variety of roles with a focus on local policing and partnership working. Jason was the force’s Head of Business change and a Chief Superintendent for Rotherham during the child sexual exploitation investigations, where he worked to help rebuild confidence in the local authorities.

Jason is currently a strategic commander for firearms incidents and the National Police Chief’s Council lead for Drugs.

Follow Jason on Twitter at @DCCHarwin

+
Kerrin Wilson (Assistant Chief Constable)

Kerrin was appointed Assistant Chief Constable in July 2018, having previously been Head of Cleveland & Durham (Police) Special Operations Unit.

Kerrin started her policing career in 1992 with Northumbria Police.  She did the bulk of her service with Cleveland Constabulary before moving to North Yorkshire Police on promotion to Chief Inspector and then joining Durham Constabulary in 2013 as a Superintendent. 

Kerrin has a background in a variety of disciplines at all levels of her career from operational uniform, CID and specialist roles. This has included Head of Tasking & Co-ordinating Command (Media, Resourcing, Intelligence, Research & Analysis, Control Rooms); Safeguarding; Volume Crime; Diversity Unit; Local Area Command; Neighbourhood Policing, and serving on secondment to the Foreign & Commonwealth Office as the Director for Training the Iraqi Police based in Baghdad.

Kerrin is responsible locally for Crime and Operations which includes the Force Control Room and Criminal Justice.  Kerrin is also the East Midlands Regional lead for Victims and Witnesses, ANPR and Roads Policing. 

Kerrin has also undertaken regional and national responsibilities in the hostage negotiating world and has been deployed internationally in this capacity both on operational deployments and reviewing New South Wales Police effectiveness in a terrorist siege.

She is a keen advocate of the equality agenda, in particular supporting B.A.M.E & Women’s aspirations both within the police service and wider afield.

Since becoming a Chief Officer, Kerrin has taken on a number of National and Regional roles;

  • National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) Lead for Professionalising the Investigative Process (PIP);
  • NPCC Lead for Progression and Leadership under the Race Religion and Belief portfolio;
  • Police Steering Committee for Cumberland Lodge, a national charity working as a ‘think tank’ to encourage dialogue and debate for causes and effects of social division.
  • Board Member for JUST Lincolnshire, a single equality organisation which aims to make a difference to the lives of people from all backgrounds by championing equality, tackling discrimination and celebrating the richly diverse makeup of the County.  
  • Member of the Institute of Directors (IOD) as Ambassador for Criminal Justice and Policing.

Kerrin is married, no children, a million god children, loves life, adventure, travel and music. 

Follow Kerrin on Twitter at @KerrinWilson999

+
Sharon Clark (Chief Finance Officer)

Sharon is originally from Manchester and moved to Lincolnshire in 1992.

She graduated from Oxford with a degree in Chemistry and trained as a Chartered Accountant and qualified in 1994.

Since then, she has worked predominantly in the public sector, holding senior finance posts in the NHS, local authority and education sectors.

At the Radiotherapy Centre at Lincoln County Hospital, as Assistant Director of Finance, she took the finance lead on a project to secure £10M of Department of Health funding to transfer Radiotherapy to a new purpose-built facility at Lincoln County Hospital.

Sharon has worked on the merger of Lincoln, Boston and Grantham acute trusts to form the United Lincolnshire NHS Trust.  As a member of the Lincoln Executive team and the merger team, she was responsible for establishing the budgets for the merged organisation.

She has also been involved in a number of significant capital projects whilst at City of Lincoln Council providing financial advice from initial viability and funding, through to project completion and ongoing service consequences.

+
Chris Davison (Assistant Chief Constable)

Chris joined Lincolnshire Police in 1997, having previously served as a volunteer cadet there between 1991 and 1994.

Chris has served his entire career in the county, both in uniform and as a detective, and more recently has been the Head of Crime, the C/Supt in charge of the East of the county as well as a secondment to Lincolnshire County Council as the Assistant Director for Public Protection. He is currently the Assistant Chief Constable for Local Policing and Partnerships.

Chris holds joint honours in English Literature and Philosophy from the University of Leeds, and an MSc in Leadership and Management from Warwick Business School.

Outside of work, Chris is a fervent follower of Wolverhampton Wanderers football club, an aficionado of heavy metal and is a ludologist.

Chris lives in the south of Lincolnshire with his wife and two sons.

+
Chris Haward (Chief Constable)

Chris joined the force as Chief Constable in December 2020.

His previous role was head of the East Midlands Special Operations Unit (EMSOU) and has led on major crime investigations, tackling serious and organised crime, covert policing and counter terrorism.

In his time at EMSOU, the largest police collaboration in the UK, the unit saw an increase in operations completed, arrests made and convictions secured.

Chris was raised in Zambia and Botswana before returning to Yorkshire for secondary school. He has a degree and a Masters from Leicester University.

He joined Leicestershire Police in 1991 where he worked his way up from beat bobby to Detective Inspector through to Chief Superintendent.

He was the Gold Commander for Leicester City Football Club for several years, including the Premiership winning season, and spent three years with Interpol tackling drug trafficking across the globe.

In 2016 Mr Haward moved to Derbyshire Constabulary as Assistant Chief Constable and took over EMSOU in early 2018 in the rank of Deputy Chief Constable.

He is married with two children.

+
Jason Harwin (Deputy Chief Constable)

Jason is the Deputy Chief Constable.

He was appointed from Cleveland Police in June 2019 where he was Assistant Chief Constable for two years.

Prior to this he worked at South Yorkshire Police for 25 years in a variety of roles with a focus on local policing and partnership working. Jason was the force’s Head of Business change and a Chief Superintendent for Rotherham during the child sexual exploitation investigations, where he worked to help rebuild confidence in the local authorities.

Jason is currently a strategic commander for firearms incidents and the National Police Chief’s Council lead for Drugs.

Follow Jason on Twitter at @DCCHarwin

+
Kerrin Wilson (Assistant Chief Constable)

Kerrin was appointed Assistant Chief Constable in July 2018, having previously been Head of Cleveland & Durham (Police) Special Operations Unit.

Kerrin started her policing career in 1992 with Northumbria Police.  She did the bulk of her service with Cleveland Constabulary before moving to North Yorkshire Police on promotion to Chief Inspector and then joining Durham Constabulary in 2013 as a Superintendent. 

Kerrin has a background in a variety of disciplines at all levels of her career from operational uniform, CID and specialist roles. This has included Head of Tasking & Co-ordinating Command (Media, Resourcing, Intelligence, Research & Analysis, Control Rooms); Safeguarding; Volume Crime; Diversity Unit; Local Area Command; Neighbourhood Policing, and serving on secondment to the Foreign & Commonwealth Office as the Director for Training the Iraqi Police based in Baghdad.

Kerrin is responsible locally for Crime and Operations which includes the Force Control Room and Criminal Justice.  Kerrin is also the East Midlands Regional lead for Victims and Witnesses, ANPR and Roads Policing. 

Kerrin has also undertaken regional and national responsibilities in the hostage negotiating world and has been deployed internationally in this capacity both on operational deployments and reviewing New South Wales Police effectiveness in a terrorist siege.

She is a keen advocate of the equality agenda, in particular supporting B.A.M.E & Women’s aspirations both within the police service and wider afield.

Since becoming a Chief Officer, Kerrin has taken on a number of National and Regional roles;

  • National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) Lead for Professionalising the Investigative Process (PIP);
  • NPCC Lead for Progression and Leadership under the Race Religion and Belief portfolio;
  • Police Steering Committee for Cumberland Lodge, a national charity working as a ‘think tank’ to encourage dialogue and debate for causes and effects of social division.
  • Board Member for JUST Lincolnshire, a single equality organisation which aims to make a difference to the lives of people from all backgrounds by championing equality, tackling discrimination and celebrating the richly diverse makeup of the County.  
  • Member of the Institute of Directors (IOD) as Ambassador for Criminal Justice and Policing.

Kerrin is married, no children, a million god children, loves life, adventure, travel and music. 

Follow Kerrin on Twitter at @KerrinWilson999

+
Sharon Clark (Chief Finance Officer)

Sharon is originally from Manchester and moved to Lincolnshire in 1992.

She graduated from Oxford with a degree in Chemistry and trained as a Chartered Accountant and qualified in 1994.

Since then, she has worked predominantly in the public sector, holding senior finance posts in the NHS, local authority and education sectors.

At the Radiotherapy Centre at Lincoln County Hospital, as Assistant Director of Finance, she took the finance lead on a project to secure £10M of Department of Health funding to transfer Radiotherapy to a new purpose-built facility at Lincoln County Hospital.

Sharon has worked on the merger of Lincoln, Boston and Grantham acute trusts to form the United Lincolnshire NHS Trust.  As a member of the Lincoln Executive team and the merger team, she was responsible for establishing the budgets for the merged organisation.

She has also been involved in a number of significant capital projects whilst at City of Lincoln Council providing financial advice from initial viability and funding, through to project completion and ongoing service consequences.

+
Chris Davison (Assistant Chief Constable)

Chris joined Lincolnshire Police in 1997, having previously served as a volunteer cadet there between 1991 and 1994.

Chris has served his entire career in the county, both in uniform and as a detective, and more recently has been the Head of Crime, the C/Supt in charge of the East of the county as well as a secondment to Lincolnshire County Council as the Assistant Director for Public Protection. He is currently the Assistant Chief Constable for Local Policing and Partnerships.

Chris holds joint honours in English Literature and Philosophy from the University of Leeds, and an MSc in Leadership and Management from Warwick Business School.

Outside of work, Chris is a fervent follower of Wolverhampton Wanderers football club, an aficionado of heavy metal and is a ludologist.

Chris lives in the south of Lincolnshire with his wife and two sons.

+
Chris Haward (Chief Constable)

Chris joined the force as Chief Constable in December 2020.

His previous role was head of the East Midlands Special Operations Unit (EMSOU) and has led on major crime investigations, tackling serious and organised crime, covert policing and counter terrorism.

In his time at EMSOU, the largest police collaboration in the UK, the unit saw an increase in operations completed, arrests made and convictions secured.

Chris was raised in Zambia and Botswana before returning to Yorkshire for secondary school. He has a degree and a Masters from Leicester University.

He joined Leicestershire Police in 1991 where he worked his way up from beat bobby to Detective Inspector through to Chief Superintendent.

He was the Gold Commander for Leicester City Football Club for several years, including the Premiership winning season, and spent three years with Interpol tackling drug trafficking across the globe.

In 2016 Mr Haward moved to Derbyshire Constabulary as Assistant Chief Constable and took over EMSOU in early 2018 in the rank of Deputy Chief Constable.

He is married with two children.

+
Jason Harwin (Deputy Chief Constable)

Jason is the Deputy Chief Constable.

He was appointed from Cleveland Police in June 2019 where he was Assistant Chief Constable for two years.

Prior to this he worked at South Yorkshire Police for 25 years in a variety of roles with a focus on local policing and partnership working. Jason was the force’s Head of Business change and a Chief Superintendent for Rotherham during the child sexual exploitation investigations, where he worked to help rebuild confidence in the local authorities.

Jason is currently a strategic commander for firearms incidents and the National Police Chief’s Council lead for Drugs.

Follow Jason on Twitter at @DCCHarwin

+
Kerrin Wilson (Assistant Chief Constable)

Kerrin was appointed Assistant Chief Constable in July 2018, having previously been Head of Cleveland & Durham (Police) Special Operations Unit.

Kerrin started her policing career in 1992 with Northumbria Police.  She did the bulk of her service with Cleveland Constabulary before moving to North Yorkshire Police on promotion to Chief Inspector and then joining Durham Constabulary in 2013 as a Superintendent. 

Kerrin has a background in a variety of disciplines at all levels of her career from operational uniform, CID and specialist roles. This has included Head of Tasking & Co-ordinating Command (Media, Resourcing, Intelligence, Research & Analysis, Control Rooms); Safeguarding; Volume Crime; Diversity Unit; Local Area Command; Neighbourhood Policing, and serving on secondment to the Foreign & Commonwealth Office as the Director for Training the Iraqi Police based in Baghdad.

Kerrin is responsible locally for Crime and Operations which includes the Force Control Room and Criminal Justice.  Kerrin is also the East Midlands Regional lead for Victims and Witnesses, ANPR and Roads Policing. 

Kerrin has also undertaken regional and national responsibilities in the hostage negotiating world and has been deployed internationally in this capacity both on operational deployments and reviewing New South Wales Police effectiveness in a terrorist siege.

She is a keen advocate of the equality agenda, in particular supporting B.A.M.E & Women’s aspirations both within the police service and wider afield.

Since becoming a Chief Officer, Kerrin has taken on a number of National and Regional roles;

  • National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) Lead for Professionalising the Investigative Process (PIP);
  • NPCC Lead for Progression and Leadership under the Race Religion and Belief portfolio;
  • Police Steering Committee for Cumberland Lodge, a national charity working as a ‘think tank’ to encourage dialogue and debate for causes and effects of social division.
  • Board Member for JUST Lincolnshire, a single equality organisation which aims to make a difference to the lives of people from all backgrounds by championing equality, tackling discrimination and celebrating the richly diverse makeup of the County.  
  • Member of the Institute of Directors (IOD) as Ambassador for Criminal Justice and Policing.

Kerrin is married, no children, a million god children, loves life, adventure, travel and music. 

Follow Kerrin on Twitter at @KerrinWilson999

+
Sharon Clark (Chief Finance Officer)

Sharon is originally from Manchester and moved to Lincolnshire in 1992.

She graduated from Oxford with a degree in Chemistry and trained as a Chartered Accountant and qualified in 1994.

Since then, she has worked predominantly in the public sector, holding senior finance posts in the NHS, local authority and education sectors.

At the Radiotherapy Centre at Lincoln County Hospital, as Assistant Director of Finance, she took the finance lead on a project to secure £10M of Department of Health funding to transfer Radiotherapy to a new purpose-built facility at Lincoln County Hospital.

Sharon has worked on the merger of Lincoln, Boston and Grantham acute trusts to form the United Lincolnshire NHS Trust.  As a member of the Lincoln Executive team and the merger team, she was responsible for establishing the budgets for the merged organisation.

She has also been involved in a number of significant capital projects whilst at City of Lincoln Council providing financial advice from initial viability and funding, through to project completion and ongoing service consequences.

+
Chris Davison (Assistant Chief Constable)

Chris joined Lincolnshire Police in 1997, having previously served as a volunteer cadet there between 1991 and 1994.

Chris has served his entire career in the county, both in uniform and as a detective, and more recently has been the Head of Crime, the C/Supt in charge of the East of the county as well as a secondment to Lincolnshire County Council as the Assistant Director for Public Protection. He is currently the Assistant Chief Constable for Local Policing and Partnerships.

Chris holds joint honours in English Literature and Philosophy from the University of Leeds, and an MSc in Leadership and Management from Warwick Business School.

Outside of work, Chris is a fervent follower of Wolverhampton Wanderers football club, an aficionado of heavy metal and is a ludologist.

Chris lives in the south of Lincolnshire with his wife and two sons.

+
Chris Haward (Chief Constable)

Chris joined the force as Chief Constable in December 2020.

His previous role was head of the East Midlands Special Operations Unit (EMSOU) and has led on major crime investigations, tackling serious and organised crime, covert policing and counter terrorism.

In his time at EMSOU, the largest police collaboration in the UK, the unit saw an increase in operations completed, arrests made and convictions secured.

Chris was raised in Zambia and Botswana before returning to Yorkshire for secondary school. He has a degree and a Masters from Leicester University.

He joined Leicestershire Police in 1991 where he worked his way up from beat bobby to Detective Inspector through to Chief Superintendent.

He was the Gold Commander for Leicester City Football Club for several years, including the Premiership winning season, and spent three years with Interpol tackling drug trafficking across the globe.

In 2016 Mr Haward moved to Derbyshire Constabulary as Assistant Chief Constable and took over EMSOU in early 2018 in the rank of Deputy Chief Constable.

He is married with two children.

+
Jason Harwin (Deputy Chief Constable)

Jason is the Deputy Chief Constable.

He was appointed from Cleveland Police in June 2019 where he was Assistant Chief Constable for two years.

Prior to this he worked at South Yorkshire Police for 25 years in a variety of roles with a focus on local policing and partnership working. Jason was the force’s Head of Business change and a Chief Superintendent for Rotherham during the child sexual exploitation investigations, where he worked to help rebuild confidence in the local authorities.

Jason is currently a strategic commander for firearms incidents and the National Police Chief’s Council lead for Drugs.

Follow Jason on Twitter at @DCCHarwin

+
Kerrin Wilson (Assistant Chief Constable)

Kerrin was appointed Assistant Chief Constable in July 2018, having previously been Head of Cleveland & Durham (Police) Special Operations Unit.

Kerrin started her policing career in 1992 with Northumbria Police.  She did the bulk of her service with Cleveland Constabulary before moving to North Yorkshire Police on promotion to Chief Inspector and then joining Durham Constabulary in 2013 as a Superintendent. 

Kerrin has a background in a variety of disciplines at all levels of her career from operational uniform, CID and specialist roles. This has included Head of Tasking & Co-ordinating Command (Media, Resourcing, Intelligence, Research & Analysis, Control Rooms); Safeguarding; Volume Crime; Diversity Unit; Local Area Command; Neighbourhood Policing, and serving on secondment to the Foreign & Commonwealth Office as the Director for Training the Iraqi Police based in Baghdad.

Kerrin is responsible locally for Crime and Operations which includes the Force Control Room and Criminal Justice.  Kerrin is also the East Midlands Regional lead for Victims and Witnesses, ANPR and Roads Policing. 

Kerrin has also undertaken regional and national responsibilities in the hostage negotiating world and has been deployed internationally in this capacity both on operational deployments and reviewing New South Wales Police effectiveness in a terrorist siege.

She is a keen advocate of the equality agenda, in particular supporting B.A.M.E & Women’s aspirations both within the police service and wider afield.

Since becoming a Chief Officer, Kerrin has taken on a number of National and Regional roles;

  • National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) Lead for Professionalising the Investigative Process (PIP);
  • NPCC Lead for Progression and Leadership under the Race Religion and Belief portfolio;
  • Police Steering Committee for Cumberland Lodge, a national charity working as a ‘think tank’ to encourage dialogue and debate for causes and effects of social division.
  • Board Member for JUST Lincolnshire, a single equality organisation which aims to make a difference to the lives of people from all backgrounds by championing equality, tackling discrimination and celebrating the richly diverse makeup of the County.  
  • Member of the Institute of Directors (IOD) as Ambassador for Criminal Justice and Policing.

Kerrin is married, no children, a million god children, loves life, adventure, travel and music. 

Follow Kerrin on Twitter at @KerrinWilson999

+
Sharon Clark (Chief Finance Officer)

Sharon is originally from Manchester and moved to Lincolnshire in 1992.

She graduated from Oxford with a degree in Chemistry and trained as a Chartered Accountant and qualified in 1994.

Since then, she has worked predominantly in the public sector, holding senior finance posts in the NHS, local authority and education sectors.

At the Radiotherapy Centre at Lincoln County Hospital, as Assistant Director of Finance, she took the finance lead on a project to secure £10M of Department of Health funding to transfer Radiotherapy to a new purpose-built facility at Lincoln County Hospital.

Sharon has worked on the merger of Lincoln, Boston and Grantham acute trusts to form the United Lincolnshire NHS Trust.  As a member of the Lincoln Executive team and the merger team, she was responsible for establishing the budgets for the merged organisation.

She has also been involved in a number of significant capital projects whilst at City of Lincoln Council providing financial advice from initial viability and funding, through to project completion and ongoing service consequences.

+
Chris Davison (Assistant Chief Constable)

Chris joined Lincolnshire Police in 1997, having previously served as a volunteer cadet there between 1991 and 1994.

Chris has served his entire career in the county, both in uniform and as a detective, and more recently has been the Head of Crime, the C/Supt in charge of the East of the county as well as a secondment to Lincolnshire County Council as the Assistant Director for Public Protection. He is currently the Assistant Chief Constable for Local Policing and Partnerships.

Chris holds joint honours in English Literature and Philosophy from the University of Leeds, and an MSc in Leadership and Management from Warwick Business School.

Outside of work, Chris is a fervent follower of Wolverhampton Wanderers football club, an aficionado of heavy metal and is a ludologist.

Chris lives in the south of Lincolnshire with his wife and two sons.

+
Chris Haward (Chief Constable)

Chris joined the force as Chief Constable in December 2020.

His previous role was head of the East Midlands Special Operations Unit (EMSOU) and has led on major crime investigations, tackling serious and organised crime, covert policing and counter terrorism.

In his time at EMSOU, the largest police collaboration in the UK, the unit saw an increase in operations completed, arrests made and convictions secured.

Chris was raised in Zambia and Botswana before returning to Yorkshire for secondary school. He has a degree and a Masters from Leicester University.

He joined Leicestershire Police in 1991 where he worked his way up from beat bobby to Detective Inspector through to Chief Superintendent.

He was the Gold Commander for Leicester City Football Club for several years, including the Premiership winning season, and spent three years with Interpol tackling drug trafficking across the globe.

In 2016 Mr Haward moved to Derbyshire Constabulary as Assistant Chief Constable and took over EMSOU in early 2018 in the rank of Deputy Chief Constable.

He is married with two children.

+
Jason Harwin (Deputy Chief Constable)

Jason is the Deputy Chief Constable.

He was appointed from Cleveland Police in June 2019 where he was Assistant Chief Constable for two years.

Prior to this he worked at South Yorkshire Police for 25 years in a variety of roles with a focus on local policing and partnership working. Jason was the force’s Head of Business change and a Chief Superintendent for Rotherham during the child sexual exploitation investigations, where he worked to help rebuild confidence in the local authorities.

Jason is currently a strategic commander for firearms incidents and the National Police Chief’s Council lead for Drugs.

Follow Jason on Twitter at @DCCHarwin

+
Kerrin Wilson (Assistant Chief Constable)

Kerrin was appointed Assistant Chief Constable in July 2018, having previously been Head of Cleveland & Durham (Police) Special Operations Unit.

Kerrin started her policing career in 1992 with Northumbria Police.  She did the bulk of her service with Cleveland Constabulary before moving to North Yorkshire Police on promotion to Chief Inspector and then joining Durham Constabulary in 2013 as a Superintendent. 

Kerrin has a background in a variety of disciplines at all levels of her career from operational uniform, CID and specialist roles. This has included Head of Tasking & Co-ordinating Command (Media, Resourcing, Intelligence, Research & Analysis, Control Rooms); Safeguarding; Volume Crime; Diversity Unit; Local Area Command; Neighbourhood Policing, and serving on secondment to the Foreign & Commonwealth Office as the Director for Training the Iraqi Police based in Baghdad.

Kerrin is responsible locally for Crime and Operations which includes the Force Control Room and Criminal Justice.  Kerrin is also the East Midlands Regional lead for Victims and Witnesses, ANPR and Roads Policing. 

Kerrin has also undertaken regional and national responsibilities in the hostage negotiating world and has been deployed internationally in this capacity both on operational deployments and reviewing New South Wales Police effectiveness in a terrorist siege.

She is a keen advocate of the equality agenda, in particular supporting B.A.M.E & Women’s aspirations both within the police service and wider afield.

Since becoming a Chief Officer, Kerrin has taken on a number of National and Regional roles;

  • National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) Lead for Professionalising the Investigative Process (PIP);
  • NPCC Lead for Progression and Leadership under the Race Religion and Belief portfolio;
  • Police Steering Committee for Cumberland Lodge, a national charity working as a ‘think tank’ to encourage dialogue and debate for causes and effects of social division.
  • Board Member for JUST Lincolnshire, a single equality organisation which aims to make a difference to the lives of people from all backgrounds by championing equality, tackling discrimination and celebrating the richly diverse makeup of the County.  
  • Member of the Institute of Directors (IOD) as Ambassador for Criminal Justice and Policing.

Kerrin is married, no children, a million god children, loves life, adventure, travel and music. 

Follow Kerrin on Twitter at @KerrinWilson999

+
Sharon Clark (Chief Finance Officer)

Sharon is originally from Manchester and moved to Lincolnshire in 1992.

She graduated from Oxford with a degree in Chemistry and trained as a Chartered Accountant and qualified in 1994.

Since then, she has worked predominantly in the public sector, holding senior finance posts in the NHS, local authority and education sectors.

At the Radiotherapy Centre at Lincoln County Hospital, as Assistant Director of Finance, she took the finance lead on a project to secure £10M of Department of Health funding to transfer Radiotherapy to a new purpose-built facility at Lincoln County Hospital.

Sharon has worked on the merger of Lincoln, Boston and Grantham acute trusts to form the United Lincolnshire NHS Trust.  As a member of the Lincoln Executive team and the merger team, she was responsible for establishing the budgets for the merged organisation.

She has also been involved in a number of significant capital projects whilst at City of Lincoln Council providing financial advice from initial viability and funding, through to project completion and ongoing service consequences.

+
Chris Davison (Assistant Chief Constable)

Chris joined Lincolnshire Police in 1997, having previously served as a volunteer cadet there between 1991 and 1994.

Chris has served his entire career in the county, both in uniform and as a detective, and more recently has been the Head of Crime, the C/Supt in charge of the East of the county as well as a secondment to Lincolnshire County Council as the Assistant Director for Public Protection. He is currently the Assistant Chief Constable for Local Policing and Partnerships.

Chris holds joint honours in English Literature and Philosophy from the University of Leeds, and an MSc in Leadership and Management from Warwick Business School.

Outside of work, Chris is a fervent follower of Wolverhampton Wanderers football club, an aficionado of heavy metal and is a ludologist.

Chris lives in the south of Lincolnshire with his wife and two sons.

+
Chris Haward (Chief Constable)

Chris joined the force as Chief Constable in December 2020.

His previous role was head of the East Midlands Special Operations Unit (EMSOU) and has led on major crime investigations, tackling serious and organised crime, covert policing and counter terrorism.

In his time at EMSOU, the largest police collaboration in the UK, the unit saw an increase in operations completed, arrests made and convictions secured.

Chris was raised in Zambia and Botswana before returning to Yorkshire for secondary school. He has a degree and a Masters from Leicester University.

He joined Leicestershire Police in 1991 where he worked his way up from beat bobby to Detective Inspector through to Chief Superintendent.

He was the Gold Commander for Leicester City Football Club for several years, including the Premiership winning season, and spent three years with Interpol tackling drug trafficking across the globe.

In 2016 Mr Haward moved to Derbyshire Constabulary as Assistant Chief Constable and took over EMSOU in early 2018 in the rank of Deputy Chief Constable.

He is married with two children.

+
Jason Harwin (Deputy Chief Constable)

Jason is the Deputy Chief Constable.

He was appointed from Cleveland Police in June 2019 where he was Assistant Chief Constable for two years.

Prior to this he worked at South Yorkshire Police for 25 years in a variety of roles with a focus on local policing and partnership working. Jason was the force’s Head of Business change and a Chief Superintendent for Rotherham during the child sexual exploitation investigations, where he worked to help rebuild confidence in the local authorities.

Jason is currently a strategic commander for firearms incidents and the National Police Chief’s Council lead for Drugs.

Follow Jason on Twitter at @DCCHarwin

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Kerrin Wilson (Assistant Chief Constable)

Kerrin was appointed Assistant Chief Constable in July 2018, having previously been Head of Cleveland & Durham (Police) Special Operations Unit.

Kerrin started her policing career in 1992 with Northumbria Police.  She did the bulk of her service with Cleveland Constabulary before moving to North Yorkshire Police on promotion to Chief Inspector and then joining Durham Constabulary in 2013 as a Superintendent. 

Kerrin has a background in a variety of disciplines at all levels of her career from operational uniform, CID and specialist roles. This has included Head of Tasking & Co-ordinating Command (Media, Resourcing, Intelligence, Research & Analysis, Control Rooms); Safeguarding; Volume Crime; Diversity Unit; Local Area Command; Neighbourhood Policing, and serving on secondment to the Foreign & Commonwealth Office as the Director for Training the Iraqi Police based in Baghdad.

Kerrin is responsible locally for Crime and Operations which includes the Force Control Room and Criminal Justice.  Kerrin is also the East Midlands Regional lead for Victims and Witnesses, ANPR and Roads Policing. 

Kerrin has also undertaken regional and national responsibilities in the hostage negotiating world and has been deployed internationally in this capacity both on operational deployments and reviewing New South Wales Police effectiveness in a terrorist siege.

She is a keen advocate of the equality agenda, in particular supporting B.A.M.E & Women’s aspirations both within the police service and wider afield.

Since becoming a Chief Officer, Kerrin has taken on a number of National and Regional roles;

  • National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) Lead for Professionalising the Investigative Process (PIP);
  • NPCC Lead for Progression and Leadership under the Race Religion and Belief portfolio;
  • Police Steering Committee for Cumberland Lodge, a national charity working as a ‘think tank’ to encourage dialogue and debate for causes and effects of social division.
  • Board Member for JUST Lincolnshire, a single equality organisation which aims to make a difference to the lives of people from all backgrounds by championing equality, tackling discrimination and celebrating the richly diverse makeup of the County.  
  • Member of the Institute of Directors (IOD) as Ambassador for Criminal Justice and Policing.

Kerrin is married, no children, a million god children, loves life, adventure, travel and music. 

Follow Kerrin on Twitter at @KerrinWilson999

+
Sharon Clark (Chief Finance Officer)

Sharon is originally from Manchester and moved to Lincolnshire in 1992.

She graduated from Oxford with a degree in Chemistry and trained as a Chartered Accountant and qualified in 1994.

Since then, she has worked predominantly in the public sector, holding senior finance posts in the NHS, local authority and education sectors.

At the Radiotherapy Centre at Lincoln County Hospital, as Assistant Director of Finance, she took the finance lead on a project to secure £10M of Department of Health funding to transfer Radiotherapy to a new purpose-built facility at Lincoln County Hospital.

Sharon has worked on the merger of Lincoln, Boston and Grantham acute trusts to form the United Lincolnshire NHS Trust.  As a member of the Lincoln Executive team and the merger team, she was responsible for establishing the budgets for the merged organisation.

She has also been involved in a number of significant capital projects whilst at City of Lincoln Council providing financial advice from initial viability and funding, through to project completion and ongoing service consequences.

Neighbourhood Officer Details

Martin Derbyshire (Police Constable)
Neil Atkinson (PCSO)
Rachel Blackwell (Inspector)
Stuart Mumby-Croft (Sergeant)
William Jones (PCSO)
Martin Derbyshire (Police Constable)
Neil Atkinson (PCSO)
Rachel Blackwell (Inspector)
Stuart Mumby-Croft (Sergeant)
William Jones (PCSO)
Martin Derbyshire (Police Constable)
Neil Atkinson (PCSO)
Rachel Blackwell (Inspector)
Stuart Mumby-Croft (Sergeant)
William Jones (PCSO)
Martin Derbyshire (Police Constable)
Neil Atkinson (PCSO)
Rachel Blackwell (Inspector)
Stuart Mumby-Croft (Sergeant)
William Jones (PCSO)
Martin Derbyshire (Police Constable)
Neil Atkinson (PCSO)
Rachel Blackwell (Inspector)
Stuart Mumby-Croft (Sergeant)
William Jones (PCSO)
Martin Derbyshire (Police Constable)
Neil Atkinson (PCSO)
Rachel Blackwell (Inspector)
Stuart Mumby-Croft (Sergeant)
William Jones (PCSO)
Martin Derbyshire (Police Constable)
Neil Atkinson (PCSO)
Rachel Blackwell (Inspector)
Stuart Mumby-Croft (Sergeant)
William Jones (PCSO)

Locations

Sleaford Police Station

Address:

The Hoplands Boston Road Sleaford, NG34 7LZ

Priorities

24 Jan 2024

Anti-Social Behaviour in Greylees

Response (23 Apr 2024)

Officers have increased in the area, and through a number of investigative avenues, we have identified several young people involved, and spoken to with parents. Where appropriate, we have issued anti-social behaviour warning letters. We are also working in close partnership with the Greylees residents association as well as North Kesteven District Council (NKDC), and the development company for the remaining undeveloped area to have improved security. This work has resulted in just two reports of ASB at the old hospital site in seven weeks.

23 Apr 2024

Tackle vehicle anti-social behaviour (ASB) at Pride Park Way to combat dangerous driving and nuisance affecting the area.

24 Jan 2024

Anti-Social Behaviour in Greylees

Response (23 Apr 2024)

Officers have increased in the area, and through a number of investigative avenues, we have identified several young people involved, and spoken to with parents. Where appropriate, we have issued anti-social behaviour warning letters. We are also working in close partnership with the Greylees residents association as well as North Kesteven District Council (NKDC), and the development company for the remaining undeveloped area to have improved security. This work has resulted in just two reports of ASB at the old hospital site in seven weeks.

23 Apr 2024

Tackle vehicle anti-social behaviour (ASB) at Pride Park Way to combat dangerous driving and nuisance affecting the area.

Response (24 Jul 2024)

Patrols have been completed by the
Neighbourhood Team. Joint Community Protection
Warning Letters were served from police and North
Kesteven District Council (NKDC) once vehicles were
identified. NKDC has looked at engineering solutions to
make the area less appealing to reckless or nuisance
drivers.

24 Jul 2024

Community Drug Supply – Disrupting the supply of
Class A Drugs in Sleaford, minimising the violence
linked to drug supply, Reducing the demand for Class
A drugs by offering support for addiction.

24 Jul 2024

Summertime Anti-social behaviour – policing the hotspots across the area where we typically see a surge in nuisance
behaviour and disorder.

24 Jan 2024

Anti-Social Behaviour in Greylees

Response (23 Apr 2024)

Officers have increased in the area, and through a number of investigative avenues, we have identified several young people involved, and spoken to with parents. Where appropriate, we have issued anti-social behaviour warning letters. We are also working in close partnership with the Greylees residents association as well as North Kesteven District Council (NKDC), and the development company for the remaining undeveloped area to have improved security. This work has resulted in just two reports of ASB at the old hospital site in seven weeks.

23 Apr 2024

Tackle vehicle anti-social behaviour (ASB) at Pride Park Way to combat dangerous driving and nuisance affecting the area.

Response (24 Jul 2024)

Patrols have been completed by the
Neighbourhood Team. Joint Community Protection
Warning Letters were served from police and North
Kesteven District Council (NKDC) once vehicles were
identified. NKDC has looked at engineering solutions to
make the area less appealing to reckless or nuisance
drivers.

24 Jul 2024

Community Drug Supply – Disrupting the supply of
Class A Drugs in Sleaford, minimising the violence
linked to drug supply, Reducing the demand for Class
A drugs by offering support for addiction.

24 Jul 2024

Summertime Anti-social behaviour – policing the hotspots across the area where we typically see a surge in nuisance
behaviour and disorder.

24 Jan 2024

Anti-Social Behaviour in Greylees

Response (23 Apr 2024)

Officers have increased in the area, and through a number of investigative avenues, we have identified several young people involved, and spoken to with parents. Where appropriate, we have issued anti-social behaviour warning letters. We are also working in close partnership with the Greylees residents association as well as North Kesteven District Council (NKDC), and the development company for the remaining undeveloped area to have improved security. This work has resulted in just two reports of ASB at the old hospital site in seven weeks.

23 Apr 2024

Tackle vehicle anti-social behaviour (ASB) at Pride Park Way to combat dangerous driving and nuisance affecting the area.

Response (24 Jul 2024)

Patrols have been completed by the
Neighbourhood Team. Joint Community Protection
Warning Letters were served from police and North
Kesteven District Council (NKDC) once vehicles were
identified. NKDC has looked at engineering solutions to
make the area less appealing to reckless or nuisance
drivers.

24 Jul 2024

Community Drug Supply – Disrupting the supply of
Class A Drugs in Sleaford, minimising the violence
linked to drug supply, Reducing the demand for Class
A drugs by offering support for addiction.

24 Jul 2024

Summertime Anti-social behaviour – policing the hotspots across the area where we typically see a surge in nuisance
behaviour and disorder.

24 Jul 2024

Community Drug Supply – Disrupting the supply of
Class A Drugs in Sleaford, minimising the violence
linked to drug supply, Reducing the demand for Class
A drugs by offering support for addiction.

Response (1 Nov 2024)

During the first week in October, local officers were part
of a large-scale operation to tackle suspected County
Lines drug operations. Over the course of two days in
the Sleaford area, eight people were arrested, three
warrants were carried out, three children were
safeguarded, and weapons, cash and drugs were seized.

Neighbourhood Policing officers were supported by
British Transport Police’s (BTP) County Lines Taskforce,
and the Metropolitan Police’s Op Orochi County Lines
task force.

In the same week, a county lines drug trafficker who ran
a drugs line that supplied cocaine and heroin into
Sleaford was convicted at Lincoln Crown Court. Kieran
Staff, 40 of no fixed address, was sentenced to three
years in prison after an investigation led by Lincolnshire
Police and supported by the Metropolitan Police’s Op
Orochi county lines task force.

24 Jul 2024

Summertime Anti-social behaviour – policing the hotspots across the area where we typically see a surge in nuisance
behaviour and disorder.

Response (1 Nov 2024)

Since the start of September, we have been able to have
more officers spending time in areas which are
negatively affected by the behaviour of others. So far
this has been very well received, with lots of positive
endorsements from residents, shoppers and retailers
who are regularly telling us how nice it is to “see a bobby
out on the beat”. Our extra patrols will continue through
the winter months.

1 Nov 2024

High harm offenders – We will continue to focus our
efforts on the small nucleus of offenders who we
identify as being behind the highest proportion of
disorder, nuisance or repeated thefts from stores. In
addition to positive police enforcement action, we will
work with partners to address the root causes of
behaviour, including mental health, drug and alcohol
addiction, and housing issues.

1 Nov 2024

Anti-Social Behaviour Hotspots – In addition to the
additional officer hours dedicated to foot patrols and
high-visibility engagement in Sleaford, our
Neighbourhood Policing Team will support patrols and
make sure that the end of the school day in our towns
passes calmly and without worry to shoppers,
residents or retailers.

24 Jul 2024

Community Drug Supply – Disrupting the supply of
Class A Drugs in Sleaford, minimising the violence
linked to drug supply, Reducing the demand for Class
A drugs by offering support for addiction.

Response (1 Nov 2024)

During the first week in October, local officers were part
of a large-scale operation to tackle suspected County
Lines drug operations. Over the course of two days in
the Sleaford area, eight people were arrested, three
warrants were carried out, three children were
safeguarded, and weapons, cash and drugs were seized.

Neighbourhood Policing officers were supported by
British Transport Police’s (BTP) County Lines Taskforce,
and the Metropolitan Police’s Op Orochi County Lines
task force.

In the same week, a county lines drug trafficker who ran
a drugs line that supplied cocaine and heroin into
Sleaford was convicted at Lincoln Crown Court. Kieran
Staff, 40 of no fixed address, was sentenced to three
years in prison after an investigation led by Lincolnshire
Police and supported by the Metropolitan Police’s Op
Orochi county lines task force.

24 Jul 2024

Summertime Anti-social behaviour – policing the hotspots across the area where we typically see a surge in nuisance
behaviour and disorder.

Response (1 Nov 2024)

Since the start of September, we have been able to have
more officers spending time in areas which are
negatively affected by the behaviour of others. So far
this has been very well received, with lots of positive
endorsements from residents, shoppers and retailers
who are regularly telling us how nice it is to “see a bobby
out on the beat”. Our extra patrols will continue through
the winter months.

1 Nov 2024

High harm offenders – We will continue to focus our
efforts on the small nucleus of offenders who we
identify as being behind the highest proportion of
disorder, nuisance or repeated thefts from stores. In
addition to positive police enforcement action, we will
work with partners to address the root causes of
behaviour, including mental health, drug and alcohol
addiction, and housing issues.

1 Nov 2024

Anti-Social Behaviour Hotspots – In addition to the
additional officer hours dedicated to foot patrols and
high-visibility engagement in Sleaford, our
Neighbourhood Policing Team will support patrols and
make sure that the end of the school day in our towns
passes calmly and without worry to shoppers,
residents or retailers.

24 Jul 2024

Community Drug Supply – Disrupting the supply of
Class A Drugs in Sleaford, minimising the violence
linked to drug supply, Reducing the demand for Class
A drugs by offering support for addiction.

Response (1 Nov 2024)

During the first week in October, local officers were part
of a large-scale operation to tackle suspected County
Lines drug operations. Over the course of two days in
the Sleaford area, eight people were arrested, three
warrants were carried out, three children were
safeguarded, and weapons, cash and drugs were seized.

Neighbourhood Policing officers were supported by
British Transport Police’s (BTP) County Lines Taskforce,
and the Metropolitan Police’s Op Orochi County Lines
task force.

In the same week, a county lines drug trafficker who ran
a drugs line that supplied cocaine and heroin into
Sleaford was convicted at Lincoln Crown Court. Kieran
Staff, 40 of no fixed address, was sentenced to three
years in prison after an investigation led by Lincolnshire
Police and supported by the Metropolitan Police’s Op
Orochi county lines task force.

24 Jul 2024

Summertime Anti-social behaviour – policing the hotspots across the area where we typically see a surge in nuisance
behaviour and disorder.

Response (1 Nov 2024)

Since the start of September, we have been able to have
more officers spending time in areas which are
negatively affected by the behaviour of others. So far
this has been very well received, with lots of positive
endorsements from residents, shoppers and retailers
who are regularly telling us how nice it is to “see a bobby
out on the beat”. Our extra patrols will continue through
the winter months.

1 Nov 2024

High harm offenders – We will continue to focus our
efforts on the small nucleus of offenders who we
identify as being behind the highest proportion of
disorder, nuisance or repeated thefts from stores. In
addition to positive police enforcement action, we will
work with partners to address the root causes of
behaviour, including mental health, drug and alcohol
addiction, and housing issues.

1 Nov 2024

Anti-Social Behaviour Hotspots – In addition to the
additional officer hours dedicated to foot patrols and
high-visibility engagement in Sleaford, our
Neighbourhood Policing Team will support patrols and
make sure that the end of the school day in our towns
passes calmly and without worry to shoppers,
residents or retailers.

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.