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Mark Shields (police officer) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Mark Shields (police officer)
Mark Shields (born 1959) is a British law enforcement officer and security consultant. He began his police career at an early age, and rose rapidly through the ranks. After nearly three decades of service with the Essex Police and Scotland Yard, in 2005 he moved to Jamaica to take up a new position as Deputy Police Commissioner of the Jamaica Constabulary Force. In that capacity, he came to worldwide attention as he led the investigation into the death of Pakistan's cricket coach Bob Woolmer in the run-up to the 2007 Cricket World Cup finals. ''The Guardian'' credits him as "the British officer who changed policing in Jamaica". ==Early career== Shields began his law enforcement career in 1976 at the age of 17. He served as the head of the City of London Police's special branch from 1987 to 1990. He also spent time as a member of the Essex Police. In 2000 while there, he was reprimanded by Justice Warrick McKinnon of Chelmsford Crown Court for having briefed a group of witnesses; McKinnon rebuked him as having "tresspass() over the line of propriety in the wrong way". He went on to accuse Shields of having fabricated an observation log or at minimum of having compiled it after the fact, and to complain of his "cynical and arrogant" assertion that "I can see nothing wrong with it, so what?" in response to the concerns. Despite that incident, Shields later moved on to the Metropolitan Police Service, where he rose to the rank of Superintendent. He was posted to Frankfurt, Germany as a drugs and organised crime liaison officer, in which capacity he frequently travelled throughout Eastern European countries, including Belarus, Ukraine, and Poland.〔 He once investigated a kidnapping plot against Victoria Beckham. He also led investigations which resulted in the 2002 discovery of a large weapons cache in Hillingdon believed to have been stored by a criminal gang or professional contract killer.〔 He was the project manager on the strengthening of the "Ring of Steel" anti-terrorism cordon around the City of London.〔 Shields' work at Scotland Yard also included investigations into Jamaican Yardie gangs, which work he began in 2001 as a member of the Yard's serious and organised crime unit, under the rubric of Operation Trident.〔〔 He gained a reputation for expertise in this area, and later began playing a more international role as a result.〔〔 Shields first came to Jamaica at the request of Allan Brown of London's Metropolitan Police Service to aid in the investigation of Reneto Adams and four other policemen charged with 7 May 2003 murder of four civilians at Kraal, Clarendon Parish.〔 Shields was successful in breaking a wall of silence from the Jamaican police, persuading four officers to testify against their colleagues; however, the prosecutor was unable to secure a conviction, in an acquittal widely viewed as corrupt by the Jamaican public.〔
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