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The Chief Constable and His Medals

Nick Adderley has been sacked from his role as Northamptonshire's Chief Constable.
A 'you couldn't make it up story', amongst other Walter Mittyisms, he lied about his military career and claimed that a medal he wore had been given to him and was worn in tribute to his brother when in fact the medal was a fake

Question is, who vetted and employed this lying idiot ?. No wonder old bill is going through a serious period of doubtful trust and credibility.
This joker's behaviour is a slap in the face to all the decent cops who go about their increasingly difficult jobs with good manners and good intentions 

Northamptonshire chief constable who lied about naval rank dismissed - BBC News
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Comments

  • Phoenix nights?
  • Being awarded a medal at 15 is some achievement 
  • Absolute scumbag 
  • You would be surprised by how bad HR departments are in the public sector in checking qualifications etc.  In the private sector there is far more accountability.
  • cfgs said:
    You would be surprised by how bad HR departments are in the public sector in checking qualifications etc.  In the private sector there is far more accountability.
    I worked in the NHS for a while. During that shortish time, three 'doctors' were uncovered as fakes, no medical qualifications at all !! 
    This was a while ago, I really hope that initial screening of new staff has vastly improved
  • Stolen valour is one of the most despicable things any man can do.
    Strip this lowlife of his pension 
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  • cfgs said:
    You would be surprised by how bad HR departments are in the public sector in checking qualifications etc.  In the private sector there is far more accountability.
    I worked in the NHS for a while. During that shortish time, three 'doctors' were uncovered as fakes, no medical qualifications at all !! 
    This was a while ago, I really hope that initial screening of new staff has vastly improved
    Doesn't surprise me at all.
  • Disgusting - my Dad, Grandad, Great Grandad, Great Great Grandad all served in the British Army, incl both World Wars (Dad Cold War but also Northern Ireland) - on Remembrance Sunday I wear my Dad’s medal with pride, on the right hand side of my chest of course

    Quite simply, how dare you, you fucking helmet, do what you have done, yet millions of others wear / wore their medals, which were fully deserved, with pride, for their service to our country

    I fucking hate this sort of Walter Mitty type, and a Copper as well !!!

    Some people in this world, and their brazen behaviour, simply amaze me - he was gonna get found out, but still did it - I hate narcissist's - they will quite simply do anything, and damn all others 
    I would have thought you would have a load of Royal Flying Corps medals of your own!
  • cfgs said:
    You would be surprised by how bad HR departments are in the public sector in checking qualifications etc.  In the private sector there is far more accountability.
    Having worked in both it is pretty inconsistent between the two and is more about the HR team than actually public v private.

    At NHS I had to wait weeks for all the checks to be done including safeguarding even though it was a non public facing office role (safeguarding was about patient care).

    Understandably it was similar for being a Trustee of a special needs school in Kent.


  • 57????

    He also lied about the length of his paper round
  • Stolen valour is one of the most despicable things any man can do.
    Strip this lowlife of his pension 

    He's been dismissed, it's my understanding that happens automatically. I may be wrong.
  • Mind you some of the Royal Family medals don’t stand up to scrutiny 
  • Mind you some of the Royal Family medals don’t stand up to scrutiny 
    Thought their medals were mostly ceremonial (for being a head of a certain branch or battalion of the Armed Forces for example) unless they were awarded for a particular operational reason, in which case, they probably would stand up to scrutiny. From recent history, I know he's now passed away, but pretty sure Prince Phillip, for example, was mentioned in dispatches during his time in the Royal Navy so it would follow that he might've physically earned a medal or two.
  • Gribbo said:
    R0TW said:
    Being awarded a medal at 15 is some achievement 
    Unless it’s a Jim’ll fix it one 
    I got a Jim'll Fix It badge at 14, when Jim fixed it for me to milk a cow while blindfold 🏅 🐄 🥛 
    Did you get a drink of milk afterwards  :#
  • Prince Philip's British War medals

    Africa Star
    Burma Star
    with "Pacific" clasp
    Italy Star
    1939-45 War Medal
    with Mention in Despatches
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  • I have some sympathy with Nick Adderley. When I stormed Mt Longdon in my Bermuda shorts armed with only a potato peeler, taking out an Argie gun emplacement it wasn't for the medals, it was for the regiment and my mates. The fact that I lost my service medals in a house fire and had to fashion replacements from discarded Quality Street wrappers is besides the point, I still went on to a long career in public service resulting in my ennoblement and eventual seat in the House of Lords, where myself and colleagues successfully blocked the infamous attempt by the Tories to change the law on eating Brussel Sprouts on a Shrove Tuesday...
  • Keeps his pension.
  • Stolen valour is one of the most despicable things any man can do.
    Strip this lowlife of his pension 

    He's been dismissed, it's my understanding that happens automatically. I may be wrong.
    You are wrong, unfortunately.
    And the vetting in the police (like everything else) has been dramatically downgraded. You used to have to wait ages for it all to come back clear before you got anywhere near being employed.
    Not so now.
    All of it makes my blood boil.
  • Stolen valour is one of the most despicable things any man can do.
    Strip this lowlife of his pension 

    He's been dismissed, it's my understanding that happens automatically. I may be wrong.
    His pension will be frozen until he reaches the official retirement age of 67.
  • edited June 22
    Can't be short of a few bob. Be nice, and go someway to show a bit of remorse, if he made a respectable donation to a Veteran's charity.
  • Not like the Old Bill to lie or try and cover things up, is it?
  • Stolen valour is one of the most despicable things any man can do.
    Strip this lowlife of his pension 

    He's been dismissed, it's my understanding that happens automatically. I may be wrong.
    You are wrong, unfortunately.
    And the vetting in the police (like everything else) has been dramatically downgraded. You used to have to wait ages for it all to come back clear before you got anywhere near being employed.
    Not so now.
    All of it makes my blood boil.
    I find all this quite extraordinary. (In my old job I had to be positive vetted. I think this has now been replaced by something called an Enhanced Security Check. Same thing different name.) This was a stringent process involving amongst other things a MI5 check and an onerous interview with a specialist investigator from that organisation. 

    I would be stunned if an individual holding the rank of Chief Constable, who would be highly likely to be in receipt of material designated as top secret, had not been ESC'd.  But nothing wrong was found? Totally bizarre.
  • Off_it said:
    Not like the Old Bill to lie or try and cover things up, is it?

    It's cobblers to think he made it to Chief Constable of Northampton while lying his way to the top job.
    He's just like the Small Dick that was in charge at the Met and who was involved in so many controversial actions while brown nosing her way to the top.
  • cafcfan said:
    Stolen valour is one of the most despicable things any man can do.
    Strip this lowlife of his pension 

    He's been dismissed, it's my understanding that happens automatically. I may be wrong.
    You are wrong, unfortunately.
    And the vetting in the police (like everything else) has been dramatically downgraded. You used to have to wait ages for it all to come back clear before you got anywhere near being employed.
    Not so now.
    All of it makes my blood boil.
    I find all this quite extraordinary. (In my old job I had to be positive vetted. I think this has now been replaced by something called an Enhanced Security Check. Same thing different name.) This was a stringent process involving amongst other things a MI5 check and an onerous interview with a specialist investigator from that organisation. 

    I would be stunned if an individual holding the rank of Chief Constable, who would be highly likely to be in receipt of material designated as top secret, had not been ESC'd.  But nothing wrong was found? Totally bizarre.
    Yep, I had the same in my last posting over 15yrs ago.
    But all while I was already in post as I had been working in the service for many years.
    I can well believe he slipped through the cracks these days, unfortunately.
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