Friday, 6 November 2015

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRO-ENGLISH " CHIEF SUPERINTENDENT VICTOR OLISA " WHO STARTED HIS POLICE CAREER WITH SURREY CONSTABULARY IN 1982 : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

        BLACK  SOCIAL  HISTORY                                                                                                                      

















































































Borough Commander Biography

Portrait photo of Chief Superintendent Victor Olisa
Chief Superintendent Victor Olisa is the borough commander for Haringey.
He started his policing career with Surrey Constabulary in 1982 after leaving university. As a police constable and sergeant he gained wide experience of both uniform policing and and criminal investigation.
Victor Olisa transferred to the City of London Police in 1990 and spent three years in the Fraud Squad as a detective inspector in charge of one of the investigative teams.
In September 2003 he went on secondment to the Home Office to work on Stop and Search as part of a small team in the Office for Criminal Justice Reform. During two and a half years at the Home Office the team's work was influential in developing models for improving the effectiveness of Stop and Search.
In 2005 he was awarded a PhD in Criminology by the London School of Economics.
He transferred to the Metropolitan Police Service in April 2006 on promotion to Superintendent and worked at Southwark Borough in a variety of senior management roles.
From October 2009 to December 2010 he led the work on one of the Commissioner's strategic priorities to deliver safety and confidence to Londoners: Professionalism.
In December 2010 he took on responsibility for leading the MPS Stop and Search Team.
In March 2013 he joined Haringey as Borough Commander, having previously served as Borough Commander in Bexley since April 2012.

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