Sixty Years in the IPA

Presentation of the Inaugural Brian Deacon Award

Earlier this week retired BTP Officer and BTPHG member, Brian Deacon, was given an award by the International Police Association (BTP Branch).

In recognition of his 60 years of membership, the branch created the Brian Deacon Award, given to the Branch member who has most embodied the IPA and/or contributed significantly to the BTP Branch.

The Branch reported: “At our AGM earlier today in London we presented Brian with the first award for his many decades of service (he did smile in person, I promise). In the background is an article from the BTP Journal (Force magazine) from 1969 with Brian in his IPA role presenting a plaque.”

The BTP History Group would like to add our congratulations.

Sources: IPA_BTPBranch on ‘X’ / BTPHG Collections
The HG were able to assist in providing the image used at the ceremony.

A Modern-Day Railway Detective

 

New Crime Fiction Book

BTPHG member Gary Powell fills us in on his recent publication.

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Front cover of the book, Mind the Killer.

Following a long career in the British Transport Police (BTP) I’m often asked if I miss the ‘job’. Some aspects, for example: working long unsociable hours, the trail of never-ending paperwork and having your every move recorded and examined; then my answer would be certainly not. However I do miss the banter and the dark sense of humour shared among all members of the emergency services; behaviour which is frowned upon in today’s modern, woke police service. Of course some habits are hard to leave behind: sitting with your back to the wall facing the door in a pub comes to mind.

My first crime novel Mind the Killer introduces DI Ryan McNally and DS Marcia Frost; members of the BTP Major Investigations Team. McNally is a detective with some traditional views. Frost is young and very keen to impress. Both work in a unique policing environment and serve in a police force that is frequently over-looked in contemporary crime fiction and often mis-represented.

    The novel is set on London’s underground. When the skeletal remains of a male are discovered in an unused, subterranean, tunnel beneath Lambeth North London Underground station McNally and Frost are called in to investigate. It soon becomes apparent, from the crime scene examination, that the victim had been murdered and buried some twenty years earlier. Just as the pieces begin to fall into place a new mystery unfurls and lands on McNally’s desk. A string of female suicides across several London tube stations emerges to be a mask for a darkly orchestrated series of murders. As McNally’s team delves deeper, the eerie connection between the cold case they are investigating and the recent murders grows impossible to ignore.

    The London Underground has a community of workers serving a transient population of millions throwing up difficult challenges for any investigating detective. My novel will introduce a new world of police investigation to the crime reader and shine the spotlight on a very dedicated, hard-working, professional police force.

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Gary is a member of the Crime Writers Association.

The book is widely available through all the usual channels – Amazon, WH Smith, Waterstones etc.

Gary has previously written four true crime non-fiction books.

 

The Elizabeth Emblem

Image of the Elizabeth Emblem. which incorporates a rosemary wreath around the Tudor Crown
The Elizabeth Emblem incorporates a rosemary wreath around the Tudor Crown

A new award for UK emergency service workers who die in the line of duty has been announced today, after a campaign by the father of a murdered police officer.

Named after the late Queen, the Elizabeth Emblem will be given to the families of public servants.

The award is the civilian equivalent of the Elizabeth Cross, which recognises members of the UK armed forces who have died in action or due to a terrorist attack.

The Elizabeth Emblem can be retrospectively awarded; eligible nominations will be for deaths which occurred on or after 1 January 1948 or have taken place in Palestine between 27 September 1945 and 31 December 1947, which mirrors the eligibility of the Elizabeth Cross.

The design of the Elizabeth Emblem includes a rosemary wreath – a symbol of remembrance – around the Tudor Crown.

It will be inscribed with “For A Life Given In Service” and will have the person’s name on the reverse. It will include a pin to allow the award to be worn on clothing by the next of kin of the deceased.

The Emblem recognises how the sacrifices made by public servants who have lost their lives as a result of their duty could be recognised within the honours system.

Relatives can apply for the Emblem on the government’s website: Elizabeth Emblem. They will be reviewed by the George Cross Committee and recommendations made via the Prime Minister to the King.

Sources:
BBC News
Gov.UK

Also see: BTP Roll of Honour (Line of Duty)