Throughout his service, rising through the ranks, Ian served at many stations across the constabulary including Hythe, Portsmouth Central, Fleet, Southampton Central, Fareham, Bitterne, Hulse Road, Andover, Lyndhurst and Police Headquarters, Winchester.
Ian took his sergeant’s exam, coming in the top 200 in the country, earning a place on the Special Course at Bramshill in 1978, a year-long residential course. At 24, Ian was promoted to be the youngest police inspector in the county and one of the youngest in Britain.
He was posted to Fareham where he oversaw the move to the new police station. Ian was one of the three high-trained inspectors instructed in leading public order units in Hampshire. He regularly commanded officers during periods of significant public disorder such as the miners’ strike, nuclear convoy movements from Newbury and Molesworth, and occasions such as the Battle of the Beanfield in Wiltshire.
Between 1979 and 1982, having won a scholarship to study at Southampton University, Ian gained a Bachelor of Law degree, returning to work at Fareham during the educational breaks.
In 1986 Ian joined the Traffic Department as a chief inspector at Hulse Road in Southampton, a location he remembered as ‘well-known to me, because it was the hostel for single men and as shift sergeant I often had the need to bang some doors early in the morning in order to ensure I had a full complement of officers on duty!’
He was posted to Andover in 1989 as a newly promoted superintendent. Two years after attending the first European Senior Officers’ Course in the Netherlands in 1992, Ian was promoted to chief superintendent of Western Division, where he re-established partnerships with local authorities, restructuring divisions into a single unit to release resources back to frontline duties. That same year, he joined a team set up to help the state police of Slovakia with emergency planning to share best practice and resolve tensions with minority Romany communities who were living in disproportionately high rates of poverty.
The day Ian was told of his promotion to assistant chief constable in 1995 under Chief Constable John Hoddinott, was a literal bumpy ride. During a display of the Marine Unit to members of the Police Authority, Ian was unexpectedly airlifted from the police launch, Earl Mountbatten, by the coastguard helicopter. It was a day he said he never forgot.
Ian became deputy chief constable in 2000 under Chief Constable Paul Kernaghan, and took on national responsibilities including leading for Freedom of Information He guided forces through the new legislation and established the National Referral Unit.
Ian’s distinguished police career was recognised by his award of the Queen’s Police Medal in 2006. He retired as Deputy Chief Constable in September 2008 after completing 37 years’ service.
Following his retirement from Hampshire Constabulary, Ian took on the role as the first chief executive officer of the Association of Chief Police Officers’ Criminal Records Office (ACRO) until his retirement in 2017.
Ian’s vision and drive is acknowledged; establishing ACRO, an organisation dedicated to global community safety, raising its profile on the world-stage and developing pioneering international information sharing agreements. During his time at the helm, Ian saw ACRO grow from a small operating unit in a portable cabin just outside Winchester, to a thriving national police unit with a significant international profile. The criminal records information services ACRO provide grew under Ian’s direction, not just in demand but in range and scope too; notably taking on the co-ordination of subject access requests in 2009, the introduction of ECRIS in 2012 and the launch of International Child Protection Certificates the same year.
Ian was president of the British Association of Public Communications Officials, director and company secretary of the Chief Police Officers’ Staff Association, and a founding father of the Southampton Police Club Trust Fund, which was formed following the sale of the Hulse Road site. The funds it created are still used today to support the welfare of Hampshire Constabulary’s serving and retired officers and staff.
On top of his love of gardening and family life, Ian also found time to run the local Cubs’ football team in Hythe on Saturday mornings, following his philosophy that all boys get a chance to play, leading the team to win several trophies along the way.
In 2015 Ian was awarded the honour of Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in recognition of his services to policing and public protection. By this time he had gained international recognition for his work from police chiefs around the world. Whether it was signing a Memorandum of Understanding with the United Arab Emirates, working with senior officers in Pakistan or the Caribbean, liaising with global ambassadors, or speaking to the media, Ian was always happy to lead on the discussions and negotiate the best outcomes for safer communities.
In 2017, Ian fulfilled a decade-long ambition to sign an agreement with the FBI to formalise the exchange of conviction data between the UK and the United States. It was a momentous achievement and one that has paved the way for a greater level of co-operation and information sharing between ACRO and its US counterparts ever since.
At the same time as leading ACRO, Ian also had responsibilities as Director of Information for the police service. It was a role in which he was instrumental in continuing to shape policy and leading policing through changes in data protection, records management and Freedom of Information.
Whether a leader, a boss, a mentor or police-dad to all who needed him, Ian had a way of making the people who worked for him feel special. He was a staunch supporter of the Rock Challenge initiative, originally introduced to the UK by Hampshire Constabulary in 1995. He played Father Christmas for the children of ACRO staff at the children’s Christmas Parties, and retained a keen interest in the Hampshire Constabulary Male Voice Choir and the Hampshire Constabulary Band. More than a just fan, he supported their events and helped raise money for percussion and kit.
On his retirement in 2017, Ian said: “It has been a great privilege to be DCC of this force. Policing Hampshire has been my life, and I always strived to ensure that I have given my best for the communities we serve and the staff whom I represent.”
One of Ian’s most enduring legacies is Families’ Day, now an annual tradition in the Hampshire Constabulary calendar. He mostly organised the event for 20 years until his retirement as DCC, and continued to support it afterwards, becoming known as its ‘grandfather’ and the nickname of ‘Mr Netley.’ Speaking at the event in June 2008, he said: “It has also been a great privilege to help organise Families Day. When I started 20 years ago, we didn’t get any children. Just look around you now. This is what it’s all about. This is a family force, and I hope it always will be.”
Ian received outstanding support from Macmillan nurses and Oakhaven Hospice, which enabled him to spend his final days comfortably and at home with his wife Maggie and four children around him. Ian filled their lives with such knowledge, fun and laughter, and gave so many people memories that they will cherish forever.
Ian died peacefully at his home, surrounded by his family; “a wonderful husband, dad and grandad, having bravely lived with cancer for some time”.
Described by colleagues as ‘Hampshire to his core’, Ian was ethical, visionary and generous with his time and wisdom, a great supporter of all our police family and mentor to so many. There are very few areas of Hampshire Constabulary that Ian did not shape in some way, and many more areas in national and international policing that have been influenced by his commitment to community safety and catching criminals.