POLICE DETAILS
Warwickshire Police - Warwick Rural West Neighbourhood
Warwickshire Police Information
Warwickshire Police is the territorial police force responsible for policing Warwickshire.
Warwick Rural West Neighbourhood
Warwickshire Police has not provided any neighbourhood information at this time.
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Police Force Map - Warwickshire Police
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Contact Details
Senior Officer Details
Alex was appointed Temporary Assistant Chief Constable for Warwickshire Police in August 2018.
He began his career in policing in 2002, joining Surrey Police as a Police Constable where he worked in a variety of frontline uniform and detective roles up to the rank of Detective Sergeant. He joined Warwickshire Police in 2007 and became a member of the Police National High Potential Development Scheme in 2008.
Alex has experience working as a Firearms Commander, Public Order Commander and Senior Investigating Officer. He has worked in uniform and detective roles at every rank to date, and spent a year on secondment to the National Crime Agency in 2012, where he was responsible for leading a number of projects to tackle serious organised crime, terrorism and international drug trafficking.
On his return, Alex took up the post of Director of Intelligence for Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police. During this time he led a programme of work which resulted in a new structure for delivering intelligence services across both forces, including the roll out of a single intelligence and single briefing and tasking system. He also led nationally on the design and implementation of new intelligence products, supporting the introduction of the UK's first ever national tasking and coordination process for law enforcement.
In 2014, Alex was asked to help Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police better understand their current and future demands. The results of this work received recognition from the College of Policing and HM Treasury, and informed the future design of local policing services across both forces. In 2015, Alex became the policing area commander for North Worcestershire responsible for leading the teams that provide 24/7 response, investigation and neighbourhood policing services. The following year he was appointed Chief Superintendent responsible for local policing services across Warwickshire Police, and responsible for delivering Criminal Justice, Custody, Communications Centre, Crime Bureau and Firearms Licensing services across Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police.
Alex has Post Graduate and Masters qualifications in Leadership and Management. In his downtime he enjoys all sports and for his sins supports Southampton Football Club!
Debbie Tedds grew up in Leamington Spa and joined Warwickshire Police in March 1989. She served across Warwickshire in a variety of roles and departments as a Constable, predominantly within the Investigations departments and was promoted to Detective Sergeant in 2002.
Debbie progressed through the ranks, being the first female Warwickshire officer to achieve the rank of Detective Inspector working within Reactive CID, Proactive CID, Intelligence and setting up the Protecting Vulnerable Persons unit and introducing Multi-Agency Risk Assessment Conferences into Warwickshire before being promoted to Superintendent in 2009 to head up the then Judicial Services Department.
She was one of the founder members of Senior Women in Policing for Warwickshire and was nominated for a Continued Excellence in Performance Award presented by the British Association for Women in Policing.
Debbie was seconded to Her Majesty's Inspectorate for Constabulary in 2011 as a Specialist Staff Officer leading on Vulnerability and in particularly Child Protection. Following this role she returned to Warwickshire Police and was appointed as the Policing Area Commander for South Warwickshire. She was then promoted in 2015 as Chief Superintendent and performed roles across the alliance with West Mercia Police heading up the Assurance and Service Improvement function and more recently she was the Head of Crime and Operations.
She was successful at the Senior Police National Assessment Centre in November 2018 and graduated as the first Warwickshire female officer in March 2019. She is incredibly proud and honoured to serve as a Warwickshire officer, in the county she was born and grew up in, which is most definitely her home.
In May 2018 Jeff Carruthers was appointed as Chief Finance Officer.
Jeff is a qualified accountant a member of the Chartered Institute of Public Finance (CIPFA) and Accountancy and The Association of Accounting Technicians (AAT). Having worked for Warwickshire County Council for the early part of his career Jeff gained wide-ranging experience in variety roles both in a central finance team and working directly with the front line service providers including head teachers, social workers and engineers, at the forefront of devolved financial management.
Jeff joined Warwickshire Police in 1997 as Systems Accountant and given the task of implementing a year 2000 (Y2K) compliant finance system. He subsequently took up roles that involved financial and business planning, budgeting and preparing the annual statement of accounts during a period of substantial change in Warwickshire Police, national policing, and the area of technical accounting and governance. Jeff was seconded to the team that prepared the business case for the proposed merger of the four regional forces; he was the finance lead for the tragic fire in a warehouse in Atherstone on Stour South Warwickshire where four of colleagues in the fire services tragically lost their lives. More recently he has worked on developing the accounting arrangements for Police and Crime Commissioners (PCC) and Chief Constables following the creation of the PCC and the financial accounting arrangements for the alliance. He holds a role on the national Police Pensions Board governing pension schemes administered by Kier Business Services Ltd. He has also support the National College of Policing to deliver the Senior Leadership Programme and is an active volunteer on the CIPFA 6th Form Management Team Games which aims to develop students financial and management skills using a real live scenario.
In April 2013 Jeff took up the role of Head of Accountancy and Financial Services for the alliance and in May 2018 was appointed to the new role of the Chief Finance Officer which carries statutory responsibilities as the Chief Finance Officer to the two Chief Constable's of Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police.
Jeff has led the finance team through significant change including the formation of the alliance and consolidating the finance team on one site using a single finance system, common policies and harmonised financial arrangements, whilst reducing the core finance team by 50%.
It is Jeff's ambition to support the people in the Finance Directorate to be the best they can be. Both he and the team are committed to delivering cost effective financial services, ensuring there is appropriate financial control and seeking out greater efficiencies to increase our front line capacity and protect people from harm.
Martin began his policing career with Norfolk Constabulary in 1988, serving 16 years with Norfolk, both in CID and operational roles, which included a secondment to the Foreign Office in 2003 and working in Malawi to help set up their police service's intelligence and crime management systems. On his return, he headed Norfolk's Anti-Corruption unit in Professional Standards, before being promoted on transfer to Suffolk Police, where he headed up Suffolk Police's Professional Standards Department.
In 2006, as Chief Superintendent and Basic Command Unit (BCU) Commander, he led the amalgamation of the Eastern and Southern policing areas in Suffolk, which encompassed the towns of Ipswich and Lowestoft.
Martin joined Northamptonshire Police from Suffolk Constabulary in October 2009. During his first two years as Assistant Chief Constable (ACC) in Northamptonshire, he was responsible for Territorial Policing. He initiated and led for the force on the first two years of Operation Guardian, a large scale, countywide initiative that significantly reduced crimes of robbery, burglary and vehicle crime in Northamptonshire. In 2011 he took on the ACC portfolio for Crime and Justice in the county. Whilst in this role he oversaw the force investigation and subsequent worldwide manhunt for the murderer of a Chinese family of four in Northampton.
Martin became Deputy Chief Constable in February 2013. In this role he led the Northamptonshire Police Programme "Aspire" which transformed policing services within tight financial restrictions.
Martin became the new Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police on 1st April 2015. In this role, with alliance partners West Mercia Police, he has set out the joint vision for building an alliance for the future and the way in which policing services will be delivered moving towards 2020.
He has been the National Policing lead for Vetting since 2010 and in 2015 became the NPCC lead for Professional Standards and Ethics. As the national portfolio holder for police vetting, Martin has overseen the introduction of Biometric vetting nationally and the development of a new College of Policing professional vetting code of practice which will be launched shortly.
Martin was awarded the Queens Police Medal (QPM) in New Years Honours in 2016.
Martin is married with two children, and his interests include rugby and skiing.
Richard Moore was born in Northern Ireland and joined West Midlands Police when he was 20, in 1992.
During his 25 years of service, Richard has held roles as head of Local Policing for East Birmingham, Programme Director for Business Transformation, as well as roles in Counter Terrorism and crime investigation.
Richard joined Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police as Assistant Chief Constable with responsibility for Protective Services, which includes responsibility for Crime Management, Forensics Services, Intelligence, Major Investigations, Operations, Protecting Vulnerable People and Specialist Operations.
He was appointed Deputy Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police in August 2018.
Alex was appointed Temporary Assistant Chief Constable for Warwickshire Police in August 2018.
He began his career in policing in 2002, joining Surrey Police as a Police Constable where he worked in a variety of frontline uniform and detective roles up to the rank of Detective Sergeant. He joined Warwickshire Police in 2007 and became a member of the Police National High Potential Development Scheme in 2008.
Alex has experience working as a Firearms Commander, Public Order Commander and Senior Investigating Officer. He has worked in uniform and detective roles at every rank to date, and spent a year on secondment to the National Crime Agency in 2012, where he was responsible for leading a number of projects to tackle serious organised crime, terrorism and international drug trafficking.
On his return, Alex took up the post of Director of Intelligence for Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police. During this time he led a programme of work which resulted in a new structure for delivering intelligence services across both forces, including the roll out of a single intelligence and single briefing and tasking system. He also led nationally on the design and implementation of new intelligence products, supporting the introduction of the UK's first ever national tasking and coordination process for law enforcement.
In 2014, Alex was asked to help Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police better understand their current and future demands. The results of this work received recognition from the College of Policing and HM Treasury, and informed the future design of local policing services across both forces. In 2015, Alex became the policing area commander for North Worcestershire responsible for leading the teams that provide 24/7 response, investigation and neighbourhood policing services. The following year he was appointed Chief Superintendent responsible for local policing services across Warwickshire Police, and responsible for delivering Criminal Justice, Custody, Communications Centre, Crime Bureau and Firearms Licensing services across Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police.
Alex has Post Graduate and Masters qualifications in Leadership and Management. In his downtime he enjoys all sports and for his sins supports Southampton Football Club!
Debbie Tedds grew up in Leamington Spa and joined Warwickshire Police in March 1989. She served across Warwickshire in a variety of roles and departments as a Constable, predominantly within the Investigations departments and was promoted to Detective Sergeant in 2002.
Debbie progressed through the ranks, being the first female Warwickshire officer to achieve the rank of Detective Inspector working within Reactive CID, Proactive CID, Intelligence and setting up the Protecting Vulnerable Persons unit and introducing Multi-Agency Risk Assessment Conferences into Warwickshire before being promoted to Superintendent in 2009 to head up the then Judicial Services Department.
She was one of the founder members of Senior Women in Policing for Warwickshire and was nominated for a Continued Excellence in Performance Award presented by the British Association for Women in Policing.
Debbie was seconded to Her Majesty's Inspectorate for Constabulary in 2011 as a Specialist Staff Officer leading on Vulnerability and in particularly Child Protection. Following this role she returned to Warwickshire Police and was appointed as the Policing Area Commander for South Warwickshire. She was then promoted in 2015 as Chief Superintendent and performed roles across the alliance with West Mercia Police heading up the Assurance and Service Improvement function and more recently she was the Head of Crime and Operations.
She was successful at the Senior Police National Assessment Centre in November 2018 and graduated as the first Warwickshire female officer in March 2019. She is incredibly proud and honoured to serve as a Warwickshire officer, in the county she was born and grew up in, which is most definitely her home.
In May 2018 Jeff Carruthers was appointed as Chief Finance Officer.
Jeff is a qualified accountant a member of the Chartered Institute of Public Finance (CIPFA) and Accountancy and The Association of Accounting Technicians (AAT). Having worked for Warwickshire County Council for the early part of his career Jeff gained wide-ranging experience in variety roles both in a central finance team and working directly with the front line service providers including head teachers, social workers and engineers, at the forefront of devolved financial management.
Jeff joined Warwickshire Police in 1997 as Systems Accountant and given the task of implementing a year 2000 (Y2K) compliant finance system. He subsequently took up roles that involved financial and business planning, budgeting and preparing the annual statement of accounts during a period of substantial change in Warwickshire Police, national policing, and the area of technical accounting and governance. Jeff was seconded to the team that prepared the business case for the proposed merger of the four regional forces; he was the finance lead for the tragic fire in a warehouse in Atherstone on Stour South Warwickshire where four of colleagues in the fire services tragically lost their lives. More recently he has worked on developing the accounting arrangements for Police and Crime Commissioners (PCC) and Chief Constables following the creation of the PCC and the financial accounting arrangements for the alliance. He holds a role on the national Police Pensions Board governing pension schemes administered by Kier Business Services Ltd. He has also support the National College of Policing to deliver the Senior Leadership Programme and is an active volunteer on the CIPFA 6th Form Management Team Games which aims to develop students financial and management skills using a real live scenario.
In April 2013 Jeff took up the role of Head of Accountancy and Financial Services for the alliance and in May 2018 was appointed to the new role of the Chief Finance Officer which carries statutory responsibilities as the Chief Finance Officer to the two Chief Constable's of Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police.
Jeff has led the finance team through significant change including the formation of the alliance and consolidating the finance team on one site using a single finance system, common policies and harmonised financial arrangements, whilst reducing the core finance team by 50%.
It is Jeff's ambition to support the people in the Finance Directorate to be the best they can be. Both he and the team are committed to delivering cost effective financial services, ensuring there is appropriate financial control and seeking out greater efficiencies to increase our front line capacity and protect people from harm.
Martin began his policing career with Norfolk Constabulary in 1988, serving 16 years with Norfolk, both in CID and operational roles, which included a secondment to the Foreign Office in 2003 and working in Malawi to help set up their police service's intelligence and crime management systems. On his return, he headed Norfolk's Anti-Corruption unit in Professional Standards, before being promoted on transfer to Suffolk Police, where he headed up Suffolk Police's Professional Standards Department.
In 2006, as Chief Superintendent and Basic Command Unit (BCU) Commander, he led the amalgamation of the Eastern and Southern policing areas in Suffolk, which encompassed the towns of Ipswich and Lowestoft.
Martin joined Northamptonshire Police from Suffolk Constabulary in October 2009. During his first two years as Assistant Chief Constable (ACC) in Northamptonshire, he was responsible for Territorial Policing. He initiated and led for the force on the first two years of Operation Guardian, a large scale, countywide initiative that significantly reduced crimes of robbery, burglary and vehicle crime in Northamptonshire. In 2011 he took on the ACC portfolio for Crime and Justice in the county. Whilst in this role he oversaw the force investigation and subsequent worldwide manhunt for the murderer of a Chinese family of four in Northampton.
Martin became Deputy Chief Constable in February 2013. In this role he led the Northamptonshire Police Programme "Aspire" which transformed policing services within tight financial restrictions.
Martin became the new Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police on 1st April 2015. In this role, with alliance partners West Mercia Police, he has set out the joint vision for building an alliance for the future and the way in which policing services will be delivered moving towards 2020.
He has been the National Policing lead for Vetting since 2010 and in 2015 became the NPCC lead for Professional Standards and Ethics. As the national portfolio holder for police vetting, Martin has overseen the introduction of Biometric vetting nationally and the development of a new College of Policing professional vetting code of practice which will be launched shortly.
Martin was awarded the Queens Police Medal (QPM) in New Years Honours in 2016.
Martin is married with two children, and his interests include rugby and skiing.
Richard Moore was born in Northern Ireland and joined West Midlands Police when he was 20, in 1992.
During his 25 years of service, Richard has held roles as head of Local Policing for East Birmingham, Programme Director for Business Transformation, as well as roles in Counter Terrorism and crime investigation.
Richard joined Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police as Assistant Chief Constable with responsibility for Protective Services, which includes responsibility for Crime Management, Forensics Services, Intelligence, Major Investigations, Operations, Protecting Vulnerable People and Specialist Operations.
He was appointed Deputy Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police in August 2018.
Alex was appointed Temporary Assistant Chief Constable for Warwickshire Police in August 2018.
He began his career in policing in 2002, joining Surrey Police as a Police Constable where he worked in a variety of frontline uniform and detective roles up to the rank of Detective Sergeant. He joined Warwickshire Police in 2007 and became a member of the Police National High Potential Development Scheme in 2008.
Alex has experience working as a Firearms Commander, Public Order Commander and Senior Investigating Officer. He has worked in uniform and detective roles at every rank to date, and spent a year on secondment to the National Crime Agency in 2012, where he was responsible for leading a number of projects to tackle serious organised crime, terrorism and international drug trafficking.
On his return, Alex took up the post of Director of Intelligence for Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police. During this time he led a programme of work which resulted in a new structure for delivering intelligence services across both forces, including the roll out of a single intelligence and single briefing and tasking system. He also led nationally on the design and implementation of new intelligence products, supporting the introduction of the UK's first ever national tasking and coordination process for law enforcement.
In 2014, Alex was asked to help Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police better understand their current and future demands. The results of this work received recognition from the College of Policing and HM Treasury, and informed the future design of local policing services across both forces. In 2015, Alex became the policing area commander for North Worcestershire responsible for leading the teams that provide 24/7 response, investigation and neighbourhood policing services. The following year he was appointed Chief Superintendent responsible for local policing services across Warwickshire Police, and responsible for delivering Criminal Justice, Custody, Communications Centre, Crime Bureau and Firearms Licensing services across Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police.
Alex has Post Graduate and Masters qualifications in Leadership and Management. In his downtime he enjoys all sports and for his sins supports Southampton Football Club!
Debbie Tedds grew up in Leamington Spa and joined Warwickshire Police in March 1989. She served across Warwickshire in a variety of roles and departments as a Constable, predominantly within the Investigations departments and was promoted to Detective Sergeant in 2002.
Debbie progressed through the ranks, being the first female Warwickshire officer to achieve the rank of Detective Inspector working within Reactive CID, Proactive CID, Intelligence and setting up the Protecting Vulnerable Persons unit and introducing Multi-Agency Risk Assessment Conferences into Warwickshire before being promoted to Superintendent in 2009 to head up the then Judicial Services Department.
She was one of the founder members of Senior Women in Policing for Warwickshire and was nominated for a Continued Excellence in Performance Award presented by the British Association for Women in Policing.
Debbie was seconded to Her Majesty's Inspectorate for Constabulary in 2011 as a Specialist Staff Officer leading on Vulnerability and in particularly Child Protection. Following this role she returned to Warwickshire Police and was appointed as the Policing Area Commander for South Warwickshire. She was then promoted in 2015 as Chief Superintendent and performed roles across the alliance with West Mercia Police heading up the Assurance and Service Improvement function and more recently she was the Head of Crime and Operations.
She was successful at the Senior Police National Assessment Centre in November 2018 and graduated as the first Warwickshire female officer in March 2019. She is incredibly proud and honoured to serve as a Warwickshire officer, in the county she was born and grew up in, which is most definitely her home.
In May 2018 Jeff Carruthers was appointed as Chief Finance Officer.
Jeff is a qualified accountant a member of the Chartered Institute of Public Finance (CIPFA) and Accountancy and The Association of Accounting Technicians (AAT). Having worked for Warwickshire County Council for the early part of his career Jeff gained wide-ranging experience in variety roles both in a central finance team and working directly with the front line service providers including head teachers, social workers and engineers, at the forefront of devolved financial management.
Jeff joined Warwickshire Police in 1997 as Systems Accountant and given the task of implementing a year 2000 (Y2K) compliant finance system. He subsequently took up roles that involved financial and business planning, budgeting and preparing the annual statement of accounts during a period of substantial change in Warwickshire Police, national policing, and the area of technical accounting and governance. Jeff was seconded to the team that prepared the business case for the proposed merger of the four regional forces; he was the finance lead for the tragic fire in a warehouse in Atherstone on Stour South Warwickshire where four of colleagues in the fire services tragically lost their lives. More recently he has worked on developing the accounting arrangements for Police and Crime Commissioners (PCC) and Chief Constables following the creation of the PCC and the financial accounting arrangements for the alliance. He holds a role on the national Police Pensions Board governing pension schemes administered by Kier Business Services Ltd. He has also support the National College of Policing to deliver the Senior Leadership Programme and is an active volunteer on the CIPFA 6th Form Management Team Games which aims to develop students financial and management skills using a real live scenario.
In April 2013 Jeff took up the role of Head of Accountancy and Financial Services for the alliance and in May 2018 was appointed to the new role of the Chief Finance Officer which carries statutory responsibilities as the Chief Finance Officer to the two Chief Constable's of Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police.
Jeff has led the finance team through significant change including the formation of the alliance and consolidating the finance team on one site using a single finance system, common policies and harmonised financial arrangements, whilst reducing the core finance team by 50%.
It is Jeff's ambition to support the people in the Finance Directorate to be the best they can be. Both he and the team are committed to delivering cost effective financial services, ensuring there is appropriate financial control and seeking out greater efficiencies to increase our front line capacity and protect people from harm.
Martin began his policing career with Norfolk Constabulary in 1988, serving 16 years with Norfolk, both in CID and operational roles, which included a secondment to the Foreign Office in 2003 and working in Malawi to help set up their police service's intelligence and crime management systems. On his return, he headed Norfolk's Anti-Corruption unit in Professional Standards, before being promoted on transfer to Suffolk Police, where he headed up Suffolk Police's Professional Standards Department.
In 2006, as Chief Superintendent and Basic Command Unit (BCU) Commander, he led the amalgamation of the Eastern and Southern policing areas in Suffolk, which encompassed the towns of Ipswich and Lowestoft.
Martin joined Northamptonshire Police from Suffolk Constabulary in October 2009. During his first two years as Assistant Chief Constable (ACC) in Northamptonshire, he was responsible for Territorial Policing. He initiated and led for the force on the first two years of Operation Guardian, a large scale, countywide initiative that significantly reduced crimes of robbery, burglary and vehicle crime in Northamptonshire. In 2011 he took on the ACC portfolio for Crime and Justice in the county. Whilst in this role he oversaw the force investigation and subsequent worldwide manhunt for the murderer of a Chinese family of four in Northampton.
Martin became Deputy Chief Constable in February 2013. In this role he led the Northamptonshire Police Programme "Aspire" which transformed policing services within tight financial restrictions.
Martin became the new Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police on 1st April 2015. In this role, with alliance partners West Mercia Police, he has set out the joint vision for building an alliance for the future and the way in which policing services will be delivered moving towards 2020.
He has been the National Policing lead for Vetting since 2010 and in 2015 became the NPCC lead for Professional Standards and Ethics. As the national portfolio holder for police vetting, Martin has overseen the introduction of Biometric vetting nationally and the development of a new College of Policing professional vetting code of practice which will be launched shortly.
Martin was awarded the Queens Police Medal (QPM) in New Years Honours in 2016.
Martin is married with two children, and his interests include rugby and skiing.
Richard Moore was born in Northern Ireland and joined West Midlands Police when he was 20, in 1992.
During his 25 years of service, Richard has held roles as head of Local Policing for East Birmingham, Programme Director for Business Transformation, as well as roles in Counter Terrorism and crime investigation.
Richard joined Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police as Assistant Chief Constable with responsibility for Protective Services, which includes responsibility for Crime Management, Forensics Services, Intelligence, Major Investigations, Operations, Protecting Vulnerable People and Specialist Operations.
He was appointed Deputy Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police in August 2018.
Alex was appointed Temporary Assistant Chief Constable for Warwickshire Police in August 2018.
He began his career in policing in 2002, joining Surrey Police as a Police Constable where he worked in a variety of frontline uniform and detective roles up to the rank of Detective Sergeant. He joined Warwickshire Police in 2007 and became a member of the Police National High Potential Development Scheme in 2008.
Alex has experience working as a Firearms Commander, Public Order Commander and Senior Investigating Officer. He has worked in uniform and detective roles at every rank to date, and spent a year on secondment to the National Crime Agency in 2012, where he was responsible for leading a number of projects to tackle serious organised crime, terrorism and international drug trafficking.
On his return, Alex took up the post of Director of Intelligence for Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police. During this time he led a programme of work which resulted in a new structure for delivering intelligence services across both forces, including the roll out of a single intelligence and single briefing and tasking system. He also led nationally on the design and implementation of new intelligence products, supporting the introduction of the UK's first ever national tasking and coordination process for law enforcement.
In 2014, Alex was asked to help Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police better understand their current and future demands. The results of this work received recognition from the College of Policing and HM Treasury, and informed the future design of local policing services across both forces. In 2015, Alex became the policing area commander for North Worcestershire responsible for leading the teams that provide 24/7 response, investigation and neighbourhood policing services. The following year he was appointed Chief Superintendent responsible for local policing services across Warwickshire Police, and responsible for delivering Criminal Justice, Custody, Communications Centre, Crime Bureau and Firearms Licensing services across Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police.
Alex has Post Graduate and Masters qualifications in Leadership and Management. In his downtime he enjoys all sports and for his sins supports Southampton Football Club!
Debbie Tedds grew up in Leamington Spa and joined Warwickshire Police in March 1989. She served across Warwickshire in a variety of roles and departments as a Constable, predominantly within the Investigations departments and was promoted to Detective Sergeant in 2002.
Debbie progressed through the ranks, being the first female Warwickshire officer to achieve the rank of Detective Inspector working within Reactive CID, Proactive CID, Intelligence and setting up the Protecting Vulnerable Persons unit and introducing Multi-Agency Risk Assessment Conferences into Warwickshire before being promoted to Superintendent in 2009 to head up the then Judicial Services Department.
She was one of the founder members of Senior Women in Policing for Warwickshire and was nominated for a Continued Excellence in Performance Award presented by the British Association for Women in Policing.
Debbie was seconded to Her Majesty's Inspectorate for Constabulary in 2011 as a Specialist Staff Officer leading on Vulnerability and in particularly Child Protection. Following this role she returned to Warwickshire Police and was appointed as the Policing Area Commander for South Warwickshire. She was then promoted in 2015 as Chief Superintendent and performed roles across the alliance with West Mercia Police heading up the Assurance and Service Improvement function and more recently she was the Head of Crime and Operations.
She was successful at the Senior Police National Assessment Centre in November 2018 and graduated as the first Warwickshire female officer in March 2019. She is incredibly proud and honoured to serve as a Warwickshire officer, in the county she was born and grew up in, which is most definitely her home.
In May 2018 Jeff Carruthers was appointed as Chief Finance Officer.
Jeff is a qualified accountant a member of the Chartered Institute of Public Finance (CIPFA) and Accountancy and The Association of Accounting Technicians (AAT). Having worked for Warwickshire County Council for the early part of his career Jeff gained wide-ranging experience in variety roles both in a central finance team and working directly with the front line service providers including head teachers, social workers and engineers, at the forefront of devolved financial management.
Jeff joined Warwickshire Police in 1997 as Systems Accountant and given the task of implementing a year 2000 (Y2K) compliant finance system. He subsequently took up roles that involved financial and business planning, budgeting and preparing the annual statement of accounts during a period of substantial change in Warwickshire Police, national policing, and the area of technical accounting and governance. Jeff was seconded to the team that prepared the business case for the proposed merger of the four regional forces; he was the finance lead for the tragic fire in a warehouse in Atherstone on Stour South Warwickshire where four of colleagues in the fire services tragically lost their lives. More recently he has worked on developing the accounting arrangements for Police and Crime Commissioners (PCC) and Chief Constables following the creation of the PCC and the financial accounting arrangements for the alliance. He holds a role on the national Police Pensions Board governing pension schemes administered by Kier Business Services Ltd. He has also support the National College of Policing to deliver the Senior Leadership Programme and is an active volunteer on the CIPFA 6th Form Management Team Games which aims to develop students financial and management skills using a real live scenario.
In April 2013 Jeff took up the role of Head of Accountancy and Financial Services for the alliance and in May 2018 was appointed to the new role of the Chief Finance Officer which carries statutory responsibilities as the Chief Finance Officer to the two Chief Constable's of Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police.
Jeff has led the finance team through significant change including the formation of the alliance and consolidating the finance team on one site using a single finance system, common policies and harmonised financial arrangements, whilst reducing the core finance team by 50%.
It is Jeff's ambition to support the people in the Finance Directorate to be the best they can be. Both he and the team are committed to delivering cost effective financial services, ensuring there is appropriate financial control and seeking out greater efficiencies to increase our front line capacity and protect people from harm.
Martin began his policing career with Norfolk Constabulary in 1988, serving 16 years with Norfolk, both in CID and operational roles, which included a secondment to the Foreign Office in 2003 and working in Malawi to help set up their police service's intelligence and crime management systems. On his return, he headed Norfolk's Anti-Corruption unit in Professional Standards, before being promoted on transfer to Suffolk Police, where he headed up Suffolk Police's Professional Standards Department.
In 2006, as Chief Superintendent and Basic Command Unit (BCU) Commander, he led the amalgamation of the Eastern and Southern policing areas in Suffolk, which encompassed the towns of Ipswich and Lowestoft.
Martin joined Northamptonshire Police from Suffolk Constabulary in October 2009. During his first two years as Assistant Chief Constable (ACC) in Northamptonshire, he was responsible for Territorial Policing. He initiated and led for the force on the first two years of Operation Guardian, a large scale, countywide initiative that significantly reduced crimes of robbery, burglary and vehicle crime in Northamptonshire. In 2011 he took on the ACC portfolio for Crime and Justice in the county. Whilst in this role he oversaw the force investigation and subsequent worldwide manhunt for the murderer of a Chinese family of four in Northampton.
Martin became Deputy Chief Constable in February 2013. In this role he led the Northamptonshire Police Programme "Aspire" which transformed policing services within tight financial restrictions.
Martin became the new Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police on 1st April 2015. In this role, with alliance partners West Mercia Police, he has set out the joint vision for building an alliance for the future and the way in which policing services will be delivered moving towards 2020.
He has been the National Policing lead for Vetting since 2010 and in 2015 became the NPCC lead for Professional Standards and Ethics. As the national portfolio holder for police vetting, Martin has overseen the introduction of Biometric vetting nationally and the development of a new College of Policing professional vetting code of practice which will be launched shortly.
Martin was awarded the Queens Police Medal (QPM) in New Years Honours in 2016.
Martin is married with two children, and his interests include rugby and skiing.
Richard Moore was born in Northern Ireland and joined West Midlands Police when he was 20, in 1992.
During his 25 years of service, Richard has held roles as head of Local Policing for East Birmingham, Programme Director for Business Transformation, as well as roles in Counter Terrorism and crime investigation.
Richard joined Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police as Assistant Chief Constable with responsibility for Protective Services, which includes responsibility for Crime Management, Forensics Services, Intelligence, Major Investigations, Operations, Protecting Vulnerable People and Specialist Operations.
He was appointed Deputy Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police in August 2018.
Alex was appointed Temporary Assistant Chief Constable for Warwickshire Police in August 2018.
He began his career in policing in 2002, joining Surrey Police as a Police Constable where he worked in a variety of frontline uniform and detective roles up to the rank of Detective Sergeant. He joined Warwickshire Police in 2007 and became a member of the Police National High Potential Development Scheme in 2008.
Alex has experience working as a Firearms Commander, Public Order Commander and Senior Investigating Officer. He has worked in uniform and detective roles at every rank to date, and spent a year on secondment to the National Crime Agency in 2012, where he was responsible for leading a number of projects to tackle serious organised crime, terrorism and international drug trafficking.
On his return, Alex took up the post of Director of Intelligence for Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police. During this time he led a programme of work which resulted in a new structure for delivering intelligence services across both forces, including the roll out of a single intelligence and single briefing and tasking system. He also led nationally on the design and implementation of new intelligence products, supporting the introduction of the UK's first ever national tasking and coordination process for law enforcement.
In 2014, Alex was asked to help Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police better understand their current and future demands. The results of this work received recognition from the College of Policing and HM Treasury, and informed the future design of local policing services across both forces. In 2015, Alex became the policing area commander for North Worcestershire responsible for leading the teams that provide 24/7 response, investigation and neighbourhood policing services. The following year he was appointed Chief Superintendent responsible for local policing services across Warwickshire Police, and responsible for delivering Criminal Justice, Custody, Communications Centre, Crime Bureau and Firearms Licensing services across Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police.
Alex has Post Graduate and Masters qualifications in Leadership and Management. In his downtime he enjoys all sports and for his sins supports Southampton Football Club!
Debbie Tedds grew up in Leamington Spa and joined Warwickshire Police in March 1989. She served across Warwickshire in a variety of roles and departments as a Constable, predominantly within the Investigations departments and was promoted to Detective Sergeant in 2002.
Debbie progressed through the ranks, being the first female Warwickshire officer to achieve the rank of Detective Inspector working within Reactive CID, Proactive CID, Intelligence and setting up the Protecting Vulnerable Persons unit and introducing Multi-Agency Risk Assessment Conferences into Warwickshire before being promoted to Superintendent in 2009 to head up the then Judicial Services Department.
She was one of the founder members of Senior Women in Policing for Warwickshire and was nominated for a Continued Excellence in Performance Award presented by the British Association for Women in Policing.
Debbie was seconded to Her Majesty's Inspectorate for Constabulary in 2011 as a Specialist Staff Officer leading on Vulnerability and in particularly Child Protection. Following this role she returned to Warwickshire Police and was appointed as the Policing Area Commander for South Warwickshire. She was then promoted in 2015 as Chief Superintendent and performed roles across the alliance with West Mercia Police heading up the Assurance and Service Improvement function and more recently she was the Head of Crime and Operations.
She was successful at the Senior Police National Assessment Centre in November 2018 and graduated as the first Warwickshire female officer in March 2019. She is incredibly proud and honoured to serve as a Warwickshire officer, in the county she was born and grew up in, which is most definitely her home.
In May 2018 Jeff Carruthers was appointed as Chief Finance Officer.
Jeff is a qualified accountant a member of the Chartered Institute of Public Finance (CIPFA) and Accountancy and The Association of Accounting Technicians (AAT). Having worked for Warwickshire County Council for the early part of his career Jeff gained wide-ranging experience in variety roles both in a central finance team and working directly with the front line service providers including head teachers, social workers and engineers, at the forefront of devolved financial management.
Jeff joined Warwickshire Police in 1997 as Systems Accountant and given the task of implementing a year 2000 (Y2K) compliant finance system. He subsequently took up roles that involved financial and business planning, budgeting and preparing the annual statement of accounts during a period of substantial change in Warwickshire Police, national policing, and the area of technical accounting and governance. Jeff was seconded to the team that prepared the business case for the proposed merger of the four regional forces; he was the finance lead for the tragic fire in a warehouse in Atherstone on Stour South Warwickshire where four of colleagues in the fire services tragically lost their lives. More recently he has worked on developing the accounting arrangements for Police and Crime Commissioners (PCC) and Chief Constables following the creation of the PCC and the financial accounting arrangements for the alliance. He holds a role on the national Police Pensions Board governing pension schemes administered by Kier Business Services Ltd. He has also support the National College of Policing to deliver the Senior Leadership Programme and is an active volunteer on the CIPFA 6th Form Management Team Games which aims to develop students financial and management skills using a real live scenario.
In April 2013 Jeff took up the role of Head of Accountancy and Financial Services for the alliance and in May 2018 was appointed to the new role of the Chief Finance Officer which carries statutory responsibilities as the Chief Finance Officer to the two Chief Constable's of Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police.
Jeff has led the finance team through significant change including the formation of the alliance and consolidating the finance team on one site using a single finance system, common policies and harmonised financial arrangements, whilst reducing the core finance team by 50%.
It is Jeff's ambition to support the people in the Finance Directorate to be the best they can be. Both he and the team are committed to delivering cost effective financial services, ensuring there is appropriate financial control and seeking out greater efficiencies to increase our front line capacity and protect people from harm.
Martin began his policing career with Norfolk Constabulary in 1988, serving 16 years with Norfolk, both in CID and operational roles, which included a secondment to the Foreign Office in 2003 and working in Malawi to help set up their police service's intelligence and crime management systems. On his return, he headed Norfolk's Anti-Corruption unit in Professional Standards, before being promoted on transfer to Suffolk Police, where he headed up Suffolk Police's Professional Standards Department.
In 2006, as Chief Superintendent and Basic Command Unit (BCU) Commander, he led the amalgamation of the Eastern and Southern policing areas in Suffolk, which encompassed the towns of Ipswich and Lowestoft.
Martin joined Northamptonshire Police from Suffolk Constabulary in October 2009. During his first two years as Assistant Chief Constable (ACC) in Northamptonshire, he was responsible for Territorial Policing. He initiated and led for the force on the first two years of Operation Guardian, a large scale, countywide initiative that significantly reduced crimes of robbery, burglary and vehicle crime in Northamptonshire. In 2011 he took on the ACC portfolio for Crime and Justice in the county. Whilst in this role he oversaw the force investigation and subsequent worldwide manhunt for the murderer of a Chinese family of four in Northampton.
Martin became Deputy Chief Constable in February 2013. In this role he led the Northamptonshire Police Programme "Aspire" which transformed policing services within tight financial restrictions.
Martin became the new Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police on 1st April 2015. In this role, with alliance partners West Mercia Police, he has set out the joint vision for building an alliance for the future and the way in which policing services will be delivered moving towards 2020.
He has been the National Policing lead for Vetting since 2010 and in 2015 became the NPCC lead for Professional Standards and Ethics. As the national portfolio holder for police vetting, Martin has overseen the introduction of Biometric vetting nationally and the development of a new College of Policing professional vetting code of practice which will be launched shortly.
Martin was awarded the Queens Police Medal (QPM) in New Years Honours in 2016.
Martin is married with two children, and his interests include rugby and skiing.
Richard Moore was born in Northern Ireland and joined West Midlands Police when he was 20, in 1992.
During his 25 years of service, Richard has held roles as head of Local Policing for East Birmingham, Programme Director for Business Transformation, as well as roles in Counter Terrorism and crime investigation.
Richard joined Warwickshire Police and West Mercia Police as Assistant Chief Constable with responsibility for Protective Services, which includes responsibility for Crime Management, Forensics Services, Intelligence, Major Investigations, Operations, Protecting Vulnerable People and Specialist Operations.
He was appointed Deputy Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police in August 2018.
Neighbourhood Officer Details
Locations
Warwickshire Direct: Warwick Police Station
Warwickshire Direct, Shire Hall, Market Square, Warwick, CV34 4SA
Priorities
20 Jun 2023 | Drug use and dealing |
20 Jun 2023 | Theft from vehicle/Theft of vehicle |
20 Jun 2023 | ASB caused by group of youths |
20 Jun 2023 | Drug use and dealing |
20 Jun 2023 | Theft from vehicle/Theft of vehicle |
20 Jun 2023 | ASB caused by group of youths |
20 Jun 2023 | Drug use and dealing |
20 Jun 2023 | Theft from vehicle/Theft of vehicle |
20 Jun 2023 | ASB caused by group of youths |
20 Jun 2023 | Drug use and dealing |
20 Jun 2023 | Theft from vehicle/Theft of vehicle |
20 Jun 2023 | ASB caused by group of youths |
20 Jun 2023 | Drug use and dealing |
20 Jun 2023 | Theft from vehicle/Theft of vehicle |
20 Jun 2023 | ASB caused by group of youths |
Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.