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John Stalker

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Name
  
John Stalker


Role
  
Television Actor

John Stalker Stalker reports finally 39revealed39 Manchester Evening News

Born
  
17 April 1939 (age 84) (
1939-04-17
)
Manchester, England

Occupation
  
Deputy Chief Constable, Manchester Author, TV personality

Known for
  
The Stalker Inquiry Television appearances

Education
  
Police Staff College, Bramshill

Books
  
The Stalker Affair: One Man's Battle with Power and Politics in Northern Ireland

John Stalker (born 17 April 1939) is a former Deputy Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police, now residing in Lymm. He headed the Stalker Inquiry that investigated the shooting of suspected members of the Provisional Irish Republican Army in 1982. He has also had a television and literary career.

Contents

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Career

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Stalker joined the Manchester City Police as a cadet in 1956. He joined the CID in 1961 and was promoted to the ranks of Detective Sergeant (1964), Detective Inspector (1968) and Detective Chief Inspector (1974). At age 38 he became the youngest Detective Chief Superintendent in Britain (1978). He attended the Senior Command Course at the Police Staff College, Bramshill in 1979. He was appointed Assistant Chief Constable of the Greater Manchester Police in 1980. A graduate of the Royal College of Defence Studies, which saw him travel around the world studying terrorism and crime from an international perspective. During his career he served in the Serious Crime Squad, the Bomb Squad and the Drugs Squad.

The Stalker Inquiry

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He headed the eponymous Stalker Inquiry, an investigation into the shootings of suspected members of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) by the Royal Ulster Constabulary in 1983, and for his temporary suspension from duty and removal from the inquiry in 1986, based on false allegations. He was the subject of a British Parliamentary debate held on 22 November 1986, where the following allegations which led to his suspension were given:

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"The reasons put forward for Mr. Stalker being taken off the inquiry essentially related to four matters. One was that a personal associate of his was under investigation for fraud. I must make it clear that even to this day that individual has not been charged with any criminal offence. It was suggested that Mr. Stalker associated with the same individual, and possibly other known criminals and that there was photographic evidence of people in the same room. It was suggested that, while he was on holiday with Kevin Taylor, the yacht on which they were sailing was under observation by the American authorities. The implication was that they were involved in drugs or some other criminal activity... It was also suggested that Kevin Taylor, through his solicitor, had threatened that if he was charged with offences he would, I think it was said, blow Stalker and his associates out........it contains innuendo of the most unpleasant sort, which is unfitting for such a report. The report is simply not up to scratch. At one stage, it talks about an anonymous allegation that the police dropped a criminal action against a person whom Mr. Stalker knew. The Sampson report says: No further action was taken…the papers have been destroyed…the matter cannot be taken further nor can any comment be made. There should be further investigation into the claim in The Observer that its inquiries showed that the case was prosecuted in the normal way."
Tony Lloyd M.P.

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The Sampson report made the recommendation to the Greater Manchester Police Committee that Stalker should be the subject of a tribunal. However, the committee voted overwhelmingly in Stalker's favour and decided not to send the matter to tribunal, instead to reinstate Stalker to his post as Deputy Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police. By the end of the affair, Stalker's legal costs amounted to a sum in the region of ₤22,000 – the Greater Manchester Police Committee refused to contribute to Stalker's legal bills. The Stalker affair had generated a huge groundswell of public emotion and many members of the public and officers from the ranks of Greater Manchester Police force offered cash contributions to Stalker to assist in covering his legal costs. After much wrangling between the Greater Manchester Police Committee, the Home Office and the Association of Chief Police Officers a fund was established, administered by the Manchester Evening News, and by early 1987 the entire sum had been realised.

Retirement

Since his retirement Stalker has been active in developing new careers, in both the media and industry. He is a director of a large national security company and runs his own consultancy and advisory group. He has delivered seminars on motivational issues, and is active on the after dinner lecture circuit. He has written frequently for the Daily Telegraph and Sunday Times newspapers amongst others.

Other

Following an incident in which Stalker had to fend off two rottweilers attacking his wife, Stella, in June 2006, he publicly supported an overhaul of the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991. It took at least sixty stitches to mend her wounds and the injury required treatment for many weeks.

Television and acting career

For six years he was the host of the Central Television TV programme, Crimestalker, and later hosted Inside Crime on Carlton TV. He presented the Carlton TV programme The Verdict, which ran for 26 episodes. He is a member of a BBC Governors advisory panel.

He appeared in the following TV programmes:

  • Question Time, (7 March 1991) as a guest
  • Harry Enfield and Chums (episode 1.3, 1994), as the Crimesearch Presenter on a sketch of The Scousers
  • Have I Got News for You, (episode 7.5, 1994) as a guest
  • Millennium: Fact & Fiction (1997)
  • GMTV, 25 January 2005 (one episode, 2005) as himself
  • Publications

  • Stalker (Autobiography) 1988 ISBN 978-0670822621
  • References

    John Stalker Wikipedia