Cleveland Police
Cleveland Police is the territorial police force responsible for law enforcement across the Cleveland policing area in North East England, encompassing the unitary authorities of Middlesbrough, Stockton-on-Tees, Hartlepool, and Redcar and Cleveland.[1] Established on 1 April 1974 following local government reorganisation that created the short-lived county of Cleveland, the force merged predecessor policing entities including parts of Durham Constabulary and local borough forces. It serves a predominantly urban population of approximately 567,000 residents over 231 square miles, facing elevated crime demands comparable to larger metropolitan areas despite its compact geography.[1][2] Under the leadership of Chief Constable Mark Webster since April 2022, Cleveland Police operates with a focus on core policing functions including crime prevention, investigation, and community protection, guided by the Police and Crime Commissioner's strategic plan emphasising offender accountability, drug and gang disruption, and overall crime reduction.[3][2] The force has achieved notable reductions in recorded crime exceeding 8% in recent years and received the Equality North East Gold Standard Award in 2018 for diversity efforts, marking it as the sole police force recipient at the time.[4][5] A defining characteristic has been its scrutiny under national oversight, with His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) placing the force into special measures in 2019—the first in the UK rated inadequate across all performance areas—due to deficiencies in leadership, crime recording, and operational effectiveness.[6][7] This followed revelations of systemic issues, including misuse of counter-terrorism powers against journalists, prompting intensified reforms in governance and frontline delivery.[8] By September 2023, sustained improvements in prevention, problem-solving, and efficiency led to its removal from special measures, with HMICFRS noting progress though acknowledging ongoing needs in areas like victim support and resource management.[9][10][7]Jurisdiction and Responsibilities
Geographic Coverage
Cleveland Police provides territorial policing across the Cleveland police area in North East England, encompassing the four unitary authorities of Hartlepool, Middlesbrough, Redcar and Cleveland, and Stockton-on-Tees.[11][1] This jurisdiction aligns with the former county of Cleveland, established for administrative purposes, and includes urban centers along the River Tees estuary, coastal towns, and surrounding rural locales.[1] The force area covers approximately 231 square miles (600 km²), making it the second-smallest territorial police jurisdiction in England and Wales by land area.[2][1] It serves a population of over 585,000 residents, concentrated in densely populated boroughs such as Middlesbrough and Stockton-on-Tees, with significant industrial and port-related infrastructure contributing to its geographic and economic profile.[2][1] Geographically, the area features a mix of heavy industry, petrochemical facilities, a nuclear power station at Hartlepool, and the Port of Middlesbrough, alongside residential and commercial districts; boundaries generally follow local authority lines without overlap from adjacent forces like Durham Constabulary or North Yorkshire Police.[1] This compact yet urban-focused coverage demands policing adapted to high-density environments comparable to larger metropolitan areas.[1]Core Policing Functions
Cleveland Police delivers operational policing through specialized units focused on immediate response, crime investigation, and community engagement. Response teams handle emergency 999 calls and non-emergency 101 inquiries, assessing risks, deploying officers to incidents, and ensuring public safety at scenes such as accidents or disturbances.[12][13] These functions prioritize rapid intervention to protect life, prevent escalation, and preserve evidence. In crime detection and justice, officers support investigations by interviewing suspects, gathering evidence, and pursuing prosecutions for offences ranging from minor infractions to serious crimes.[14] This includes proactive measures like scene preservation and offender identification, aligned with the broader duty of territorial forces to detect and deter criminal activity while upholding legal standards under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984.[15] Neighbourhood policing emphasizes visible patrols by police community support officers (PCSOs) and constables to build local trust, tackle emerging crime trends, and address antisocial behaviour through foot patrols and community partnerships.[16] These efforts aim to prevent disorder and enhance public reassurance, supplemented by special constables who assist in crowd control, incident response, and security at events.[17] Additional core responsibilities include traffic management, victim support, and collaboration with partner agencies for vulnerability protection, such as safeguarding children at risk, though inspections have noted areas for improvement in prioritization and recording.[18] Overall, these functions operate under the Chief Constable's direction to maintain peace and efficiency across the force's jurisdiction.[19]Legal Authority and Oversight
Cleveland Police operates as a territorial police force established and maintained under the Police Act 1996, which mandates each defined police area in England and Wales, including the Cleveland police area as specified in Schedule 1, to sustain an efficient and effective force.[20] The Chief Constable holds operational direction and control of the force pursuant to Section 10 of the same Act, with core responsibilities encompassing the preservation of peace, prevention of crime, protection of life and property, and detection and prosecution of offences. Individual constables within the force exercise powers derived from common law, including the ancient office of constable, supplemented by statutory provisions such as those in the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (PACE), which govern arrests, searches, and detentions. These powers enable proactive policing activities, such as stop and search under Section 1 of PACE, subject to reasonable suspicion requirements, and extend to firearms licensing and traffic enforcement under ancillary legislation. Oversight of Cleveland Police is primarily provided by the elected Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) for Cleveland, who assumed responsibilities from the former police authority following reforms under the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011, including setting strategic priorities through the Police and Crime Plan, budgeting, and holding the Chief Constable accountable for performance.[21][22] The PCC also monitors implementation of recommendations from national bodies and ensures compliance with governance standards, such as financial management codes.[23] At the national level, His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) conducts inspections under Section 54 of the Police Act 1996 to assess effectiveness, efficiency, and legitimacy, with Cleveland Police transitioning from "special measures" to routine monitoring by September 2023 following improvements.[24] The Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) handles investigations into serious complaints, deaths in custody, and officer conduct matters referred by the force, promoting accountability for misconduct.[25] Internal mechanisms, including the force's Professional Standards Department, manage lower-level complaints under IOPC-approved procedures.Historical Development
Formation in 1974
Cleveland Constabulary was established on 1 April 1974 as part of the nationwide reorganization of local government and policing in England and Wales under the Local Government Act 1972, which abolished previous administrative boundaries and created new police areas aligned with the emerging non-metropolitan counties.[26] The force was formed to serve the newly created county of Cleveland, encompassing the former county boroughs of Teesside (including Middlesbrough, Stockton-on-Tees, and surrounding areas) and Hartlepool, the Stockton Rural District transferred from County Durham, and the Langbaurgh Rural District from the North Riding of Yorkshire.[27] The amalgamation integrated the Teesside Constabulary, which had policed the industrial Teesside urban area, with portions of the York and North East Yorkshire Police (covering rural North Riding territories) and the Durham Constabulary (for Hartlepool and Stockton areas previously under its jurisdiction).[28] [29] This merger consolidated fragmented policing structures to improve efficiency and coordination across a diverse region of urban centers, ports, and rural districts, with an initial operational area of approximately 583 square kilometers and a population exceeding 550,000.[30] Ralph Davison was appointed as the inaugural Chief Constable, bringing experience from his prior role leading the Middlesbrough force since 1956, which formed a core component of the Teesside Constabulary. The new constabulary adopted a unified command structure, inheriting around 1,000 officers from the predecessor forces, and focused initial efforts on integrating operations, standardizing procedures, and addressing local priorities such as industrial unrest and port security in Teesside. Early challenges included harmonizing equipment and training across the amalgamated units, but the formation marked a shift toward a more centralized territorial force suited to the post-industrial landscape of the region.[28]Major Reorganizations and Mergers
In the mid-2000s, the UK government under Home Secretary Charles Clarke proposed merging Cleveland Police with Durham Constabulary and Northumbria Police to create a larger force covering the North East of England, aiming to achieve economies of scale and improve efficiency.[31] This plan faced significant opposition from police authorities, including Cleveland's, which argued it would undermine local accountability and operational effectiveness without guaranteed benefits.[31] By 2006, following legal challenges and a shift in government policy, the merger proposals were effectively shelved, with Cleveland Police Authority rejecting any voluntary amalgamation.[32] Rather than full mergers, Cleveland Police pursued collaborative arrangements with neighboring forces to share resources and reduce costs. In 2013, it merged specialist units, such as firearms and roads policing teams, with Durham Constabulary, projecting annual savings of £300,000 through joint operations while maintaining separate command structures.[33] This was expanded in 2015, when Cleveland, Durham, and North Yorkshire Police agreed to integrate back-office functions, procurement, and certain operational services, including a unified dog support unit across the three forces to enhance capabilities and cut duplication.[34][35] Further integration occurred in 2016 with the establishment of a joint major crime unit between Cleveland and North Yorkshire Police, handling serious investigations like murders and rapes to pool expertise and investigative resources without dissolving force boundaries.[36] These partial mergers reflected a broader trend in English policing toward regional collaboration amid budget constraints post-2010 austerity measures, though full structural amalgamation remained politically unfeasible due to local resistance and concerns over diluted community focus.[34] No subsequent proposals for complete merger have advanced to implementation as of 2025.Evolution of Headquarters
The headquarters of Cleveland Police, formed on 1 April 1974 through the merger of Teesside Constabulary and parts of Durham Constabulary, were initially centralized in Middlesbrough at facilities including Dunning Road before relocating to the purpose-built Ladgate Lane site in early 1984. The Ladgate Lane headquarters, developed in the 1970s on a 60-acre site, supported force-wide operations but incurred high maintenance expenses, exceeding £1 million annually by the 2010s.[37][38] By 2013, the facility was deemed unfit for modern policing needs, prompting reviews for replacement as early as 2007–2008. Plans for a new headquarters were formalized in 2014, with construction of the £20 million Cleveland Community Safety Hub at Hemlington Grange beginning in March 2017. This purpose-built facility, incorporating a community hub and advanced operational spaces, officially opened in November 2018 following the decommissioning and sale of Ladgate Lane, which enabled residential redevelopment of the site.[39][37][38] The transition to Hemlington reduced operational costs and improved efficiency, with the hub earning regional design awards for its innovative approach to integrating policing and community safety functions. The site continues to serve as the force's central headquarters, supporting over 1,600 officers and staff across the jurisdiction.[40][41]Period of Special Measures (2016–2019)
In 2016, His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary (HMIC) assessed Cleveland Police under the PEEL framework, rating the force good in efficiency for its approach to understanding demand, allocating resources, and planning for future needs.[42] The effectiveness inspection noted good progress since 2015, with an effective overall approach to protecting vulnerable people and responding to serious crimes, though some gaps remained in investigating crimes and using powers and resources.[43] By 2017, subsequent PEEL inspections continued to evaluate the force's legitimacy, efficiency, and effectiveness, but detailed graded outcomes highlighted ongoing challenges in treating people fairly and maintaining public trust, with needs improvement in aspects of ethical behavior and complaint handling.[44] Efficiency assessments reiterated strengths in resource matching but flagged risks from financial pressures and workforce planning.[45] The 2018/19 PEEL assessment, published on 27 September 2019, marked a severe deterioration, rating Cleveland Police inadequate across all three pillars: effectiveness, efficiency, and legitimacy—the first force to receive such uniform low grades.[46] Inspectors found the force ineffective at investigating crime (with low solve rates and poor supervision), protecting vulnerable people (including failures in risk assessment for domestic abuse and child exploitation), and preventing crime; inefficient in demand management and strategic planning; and lacking legitimacy due to inconsistent treatment of the public and ethical standards.[46] Leadership was criticized as "rudderless," with no clear direction, inadequate oversight, and a culture of low expectations contributing to systemic failures that placed the public at risk.[7] [47] These findings triggered special measures on 27 September 2019, requiring the chief constable and police and crime commissioner to develop and implement a recovery plan under intensified HMICFRS monitoring, including regular progress reports and potential intervention if improvements stalled.[47] The regime aimed to address six causes of concern, such as weak crime prevention and vulnerability safeguards, amid leadership instability—chief constables Iain Spittal (2016–2018) and Mike Veale (2018–2019) had departed amid prior scrutiny, exacerbating operational disarray.[7] During this period, the force faced heightened scrutiny for issues like delayed responses to emergencies and under-recording of crimes, underscoring causal links between poor governance and service delivery shortfalls.[46]Officers Killed in the Line of Duty
Since its formation as Cleveland Constabulary in 1974, two officers serving with the force have died in the line of duty.[48] PC Charles William Collett, aged 43, drowned on 16 October 1992 while attempting to rescue a boy from the River Tees in Stockton-on-Tees.[48] PC Alan Duffy, aged 44, was killed on 20 June 1997 in a road traffic collision while cycling to duty.[48] The force also commemorates 15 officers from antecedent constabularies who lost their lives between 1874 and 1971, primarily due to assaults, traffic accidents, or wartime air raids on special constables.[48] Among these, PC William Henderson of the Middlesbrough County Borough Police was the sole officer murdered, shot on 14 April 1893 at age 37 while attempting to disarm a mentally ill man of a rifle.[49][48]Governance and Leadership
Chief Constables
Cleveland Police has experienced a succession of Chief Constables since its establishment on 1 April 1974, with the role entailing operational command of the force under the oversight of the Police and Crime Commissioner.[50] The early leaders oversaw the force's initial development, while later tenures have been marked by higher turnover, including several short-term and acting appointments amid performance challenges and leadership controversies.[51] The following table lists all Chief Constables with their tenures:| Name | Tenure | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ralph Davison | 1974–1976 | First Chief Constable, previously led Middlesbrough Borough Police.[52] |
| Christopher Payne | 1976–1990 | Served 14 years; involved in national policing events including the Spaghetti House siege.[50] |
| Keith Hellawell | 1990–1993 | Later became Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police; noted for handling child abuse inquiries.[53] |
| Barry Shaw | 1993–2003 | Oversaw force during period of internal controversies, including disputes with senior officers; retired amid calls for resignation.[54] [55] |
| Sean Price | 2003–2012 | Longest recent tenure; dismissed for gross misconduct related to recruitment irregularities.[56] [51] |
| Jacqui Cheer | 2012–2016 | Focused on addressing prior operational shortcomings; retired.[51] |
| Iain Spittal | 2015–2017 | Acting initially; improved force rating from "requiring improvement" to "good" per inspections; apologized for historical surveillance issues.[51] |
| Simon Nickless | 2018 (acting) | Brief interim role before moving to other positions.[51] |
| Mike Veale | 2018–2019 | Resigned amid investigations; later found guilty of gross misconduct.[51] |
| Lee Freeman | 2019 (interim) | Temporary appointment from Humberside Police.[51] |
| Richard Lewis | 2019–2021 | Oversaw period when force rated "inadequate"; departed for family reasons.[51] |
| Helen McMillan | 2021–2022 (acting) | Interim focus on community engagement; retired.[51] |
| Mark Webster | 2022–2025 | Appointed to aid recovery from special measures; retired after three years.[51] [57] |
| Victoria Fuller | 2025–present | Confirmed 20 June 2025; previously Deputy Chief Constable, emphasizing force stabilization.[57] [58] |
Police and Crime Commissioners
The Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) for Cleveland is an independently elected official established under the Police Reform and Social Responsibility Act 2011, tasked with setting the strategic priorities for Cleveland Police, determining the annual policing budget (including the council tax precept), appointing and holding the Chief Constable accountable, and commissioning services to prevent and reduce crime in the force area covering Middlesbrough, Redcar and Cleveland, Stockton-on-Tees, and Hartlepool.[21] The PCC's office also manages victim support and community safety initiatives, with elections held every four years using a supplementary vote system. Barry Coppinger (Labour) was the inaugural PCC, elected on 15 November 2012 with 11,526 first-preference votes (approximately 28% of the share) in a low-turnout contest of 14.6% across England and Wales.[59] He was re-elected on 5 May 2016, securing 25,660 votes (50.2%) against the incumbent threshold after the first round.[60] Coppinger focused on increasing police visibility and community engagement but faced criticism over force performance metrics and resigned on 7 September 2020 amid an ongoing regulatory investigation by the Independent Office for Police Conduct, though no charges resulted.[61] An acting PCC, Lisa Oldroyd, interim-managed the office until the next election.[62] Steve Turner (Conservative), a former Redcar and Cleveland councillor, won the subsequent election on 6 May 2021 with 74,023 votes (54.7%), more than double Labour's Matthew Storey's tally, on a platform of "more police, safer streets."[63] [64] His tenure emphasized operational improvements post-special measures but included admissions in September 2021 of accepting hospitality worth over £1,000 from the Chief Constable, breaching standards code, leading to an ethics probe.[65] Turner also endured unsubstantiated anonymous allegations of misconduct in 2022, which he publicly rebutted as baseless.[66] Matt Storey (Labour and Co-operative Party) was elected on 2 May 2024, defeating Conservative Harry Harmer with 45,148 votes (41.1%) in the first round.[67] A long-time public sector professional from the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner for Durham, Storey issued the Cleveland Police and Crime Plan 2024–2029 in 2024, prioritizing victim support, neighbourhood policing, serious violence reduction, and road safety across six strategic themes for "safe, strong, and confident communities."[22] In September 2025, he advocated for equitable national funding amid rising demands, securing government approval for up to £189.3 million in 2025/26—a £11.8 million increase from the prior year—primarily funded by central grants and local precepts.[68]Accountability Mechanisms
The Department of Standards and Ethics (DSE) within Cleveland Police serves as the primary internal mechanism for maintaining professional standards, investigating allegations of misconduct, and handling public complaints against officers.[69] The DSE records and screens complaints received through channels such as the non-emergency line 101, online forms, or in-person reports, categorizing them for local resolution (minor issues addressed informally) or full investigation (serious misconduct).[70] Investigations may involve interviews, evidence gathering, and outcomes ranging from no case to dismissal, with officers subject to misconduct hearings under the Police (Conduct) Regulations 2020.[71] Public complaints not resolved locally can be appealed to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), which provides independent oversight for serious cases involving death, serious injury, or potential criminality.[25] The IOPC directs or supervises investigations, publishes anonymized learning reports from Cleveland Police cases, and monitors complaint handling performance through quarterly data bulletins comparing resolution times and outcomes against national averages.[25] For instance, in October 2023, the IOPC collaborated with Cleveland Police on a gross misconduct case resulting in an officer's dismissal despite resignation.[72] His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) conducts periodic PEEL inspections assessing effectiveness, efficiency, and legitimacy, including governance and accountability.[24] Following a 2019 PEEL inspection rating the force inadequate across all areas—citing poor leadership, crime recording failures, and vulnerability protections—Cleveland was placed in special measures in April 2019, entering the 'engage' monitoring phase requiring intensified improvement plans.[7] By September 2023, after multiple inspections demonstrating progress in areas like vetting and counter-corruption (though noting ongoing weaknesses in proactive intelligence), HMICFRS removed the force from enhanced monitoring.[9][71] A June 2023 HMICFRS report on vetting found Cleveland's DSE provided adequate recruit guidance but required better risk assessments for vulnerable roles.[71]Organizational Structure
Neighbourhood Policing Model
The Neighbourhood Policing Model employed by Cleveland Police assigns dedicated Neighbourhood Policing Teams (NPTs) to specific wards or localities across the force area, comprising Hartlepool, Middlesbrough, Redcar and Cleveland, and Stockton-on-Tees, with the aim of building community trust, gathering local intelligence, and tackling persistent issues such as anti-social behaviour through visible patrols and problem-solving approaches.[73][74] Each NPT typically includes a sergeant, constables, and Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs), who collaborate with residents, local authorities, and partners to co-produce policing priorities via consultations, beat meetings, and online feedback mechanisms.[75][76] A restructured model implemented in March 2020 expanded NPT capacity with 102 dedicated police constable posts and 106 PCSOs, supported by an ongoing review using data on risk, harm, and demand to refine resource allocation and enhance proactive interventions.[74] The force's Neighbourhood Policing Abstraction Policy governs the temporary redeployment of NPT personnel to emergency response duties, prioritizing minimal disruption to maintain team visibility and accessibility, with approvals required at inspector level or above and compensatory community engagement mandated post-abstraction.[77] In practice, however, Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) noted in 2021 that frequent abstractions to 999 calls undermined consistency, with variable problem-solving plans, limited evaluation of outcomes, and uneven training application hindering full effectiveness in crime prevention and anti-social behaviour reduction.[74] To bolster the model, the Neighbourhood Policing Guarantee, introduced in April 2025 under the national Safer Streets initiative, allocated £2.4 million in government funding to recruit 20 additional officers, 31 PCSOs, and 12 special constables, ensuring at least one named officer per community for regular patrols, priority-setting based on public input, and targeted enforcement against anti-social behaviour and retail crime.[78] This enhancement aligns with five core pillars: increased foot patrols, community-led priorities, performance accountability, anti-social behaviour crackdowns, and safer town centres, with progress tracked via the force website and held accountable by the Police and Crime Commissioner.[79] NPTs also integrate digital tools, such as postcode-based team locators and alert systems for local updates, to facilitate resident engagement.[80]Response and CID Teams
Response teams in Cleveland Police consist of uniformed officers who provide immediate attendance to emergency (999) and priority non-emergency (101) calls across the force area, including Hartlepool, Middlesbrough, Redcar and Cleveland, and Stockton-on-Tees. These officers, often working in pairs from district-based stations, handle a wide range of incidents such as missing persons, disturbances, and initial crime scenes, with Stockton response officers alone managing over 400 incidents in a single week in May 2023, including locating all 66 reported missing individuals.[81] Shift patterns for response teams transitioned from a five-team to a four-team model to optimize coverage and resilience amid operational demands.[82] Officers receive daily briefings on priorities before deploying to dynamic incidents, exemplified by a Hartlepool team responding to multiple events in one afternoon in October 2025.[83] The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) comprises detective-led teams focused on in-depth inquiries into reported crimes, operating from local districts such as Middlesbrough, Redcar, Hartlepool, and Stockton. These units investigate volume crimes including burglaries, assaults, drug offenses, and ram raids, with examples including Redcar CID charging individuals for multiple burglaries in December 2024 and Middlesbrough CID probing linked incidents in April 2025.[84][85] Force-wide, CID employs 92 officers, 14 detective sergeants, and 6 detective inspectors, facilitating transitions from uniformed roles via specialized training and shift patterns.[86] District CID teams collaborate with response officers for follow-up, emphasizing prosecution of high-harm offenders as stated by Hartlepool's department lead in October 2025.[87]Support and Administrative Functions
Corporate Services at Cleveland Police encompasses key administrative functions, including human resources management, recruitment and selection processes, strategic planning, and governance oversight. This department ensures compliance with internal policies and supports the recruitment of police officers and staff through structured procedures that apply to all personnel.[88] It also handles planning and governance roles, such as administrative apprenticeships focused on organizational efficiency.[89] Financial and business improvement operations fall under the Director of Finance and Business Improvement, who leads budgeting, procurement, resource allocation, and initiatives to enhance operational efficiency across the force.[90] These efforts integrate with broader corporate costs, which in recent budgets have included substantial allocations for staff pay and non-pay expenses to sustain administrative infrastructure.[91] Support functions collectively enable frontline policing by maintaining logistical backbone, such as facilities and IT systems, while adhering to statutory responsibilities under oversight from the Police and Crime Commissioner. This structure prioritizes cost-effective service delivery, with corporate services expenditures forming a notable portion of the force's operational budget to underpin crime prevention and response capabilities.[91]Specialist Operations
Matrix and Armed Response Teams
The Matrix team within Cleveland Police was established on 22 January 2024 as a specialist unit designed to address serious and organised crime through integrated operations, combining resources from multiple tactical groups including the Tactical Disruption Team (formerly the Operational Support Unit), firearms officers, the Dog Support Unit, and roads policing officers.[92][93] This structure enables proactive disruption of criminal networks, with officers trained in advanced tactics such as taser deployment, stinger use for vehicle stops, and high-risk arrests.[94] Vehicles assigned to the team feature a distinctive bright yellow livery to enhance visibility and deterrence, marking a rebranding effort that has been credited with operational efficiencies.[95] In its initial month, the team reported significant successes, including multiple arrests and seizures related to organised crime activities on Teesside.[96] Armed response capabilities form a core component of the Matrix team, with authorised firearms officers (AFOs) authorised to carry and deploy weapons in response to threats involving firearms or high-risk scenarios.[97] These officers handle a broad spectrum of incidents, from routine armed patrols to emergency responses requiring specialist intervention, often integrating with other Matrix elements like canine units for enhanced tactical effectiveness.[98] Training emphasises de-escalation where possible alongside readiness for lethal force authorisation under UK national guidelines, with the team's formation aimed at faster threat neutralisation compared to prior siloed units.[92] Superintendent Paul Richardson oversees Matrix operations, reporting directly on efforts to eradicate emerging criminal threats through coordinated, intelligence-led policing.[99]Specialist Operations Unit
The Cleveland and Durham Specialist Operations Unit (CDSOU) is a collaborative entity formed in April 2011 through the merger of specialist units from Cleveland Police and Durham Constabulary, aimed at enhancing efficiency in high-risk policing activities by pooling resources such as roads policing officers and tactical specialists.[100][101] This arrangement allows for shared operational capacity across both force areas, with CDSOU handling pursuits, traffic enforcement, and related interventions that exceed standard neighbourhood or response team capabilities.[102] Core responsibilities include conducting high-speed vehicle pursuits, vehicle interdiction, and speed enforcement operations, such as Operation Artemis patrols targeting excessive speeding, which in 2023 resulted in multiple detections and fixed penalty notices in Stockton and Hartlepool.[103][104] The unit also addresses nuisance and illegal vehicle use, collaborating with neighbourhood teams to seize bikes and motorcycles involved in anti-social behaviour, as seen in Middlesbrough operations under Operation Endurance.[105] Additionally, CDSOU participates in national road safety initiatives, including Operation Close Pass to safeguard cyclists and pedestrians from close passes by motorists.[106] Officers within the unit receive specialist training, including qualification as Family Liaison Officers to support families affected by road traffic collisions.[107] Operational bases are located at Wynyard Park in Cleveland's area and Spennymoor in Durham's, with joint-marked police vehicles facilitating seamless cross-border responses.[108] CDSOU has supported ancillary activities, such as joint vehicle checks with the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA), leading to discoveries like over £250,000 in drugs in Hartlepool in June 2023.[104] The unit's pursuits and interventions have been documented in the Channel 5 series Police Interceptors, showcasing real-time tactical decisions in dynamic road scenarios.[109] Although Cleveland Police issued a notice of intent to withdraw from CDSOU in May 2021 amid cost and efficiency reviews, the partnership remained active into 2024, with ongoing collaborations noted in financial and audit reports for shared specialist functions like forensic collision investigation.[110][111] This structure supports Cleveland's broader specialist operations by providing dedicated expertise in mobility-related threats, complementing matrix teams focused on firearms and disruption.Canine and Air Support Services
The Cleveland Police Dog Support Unit (DSU) deploys specially trained police dogs for search, tracking, victim location, and suspect apprehension operations, supporting both general policing and specialist tactical responses. Dogs undergo rigorous four-week initial training courses encompassing theoretical instruction and practical exercises in areas such as criminal tracking and restraint techniques. Handlers receive annual refresher training in canine first aid to address potential injuries during deployments. In July 2025, the DSU received donated defibrillators to equip response vehicles, enabling immediate medical intervention for officers, handlers, or bystanders in emergencies.[112][113][114] Specialist canine capabilities integrate with the force's Matrix Team for high-risk operations, including firearms incidents and public order events. In May 2024, three newly licensed dogs—Trigger, Rheagar, and Neo—along with their handlers, were integrated into the Matrix Team to bolster disciplines such as armed search and tactical support. The DSU operates under a dedicated sergeant and designated liaison officers who manage kenneling, deployment, and welfare, as outlined in force policies for handling dangerous dogs and related costs. Since December 2019, Cleveland Police has maintained an independent dog unit, transitioning from prior collaborative arrangements with Durham and North Yorkshire forces to enhance localized response efficiency.[115][116][117] Air support for Cleveland Police is provided through the National Police Air Service (NPAS), a centralized network delivering aerial operations across England and Wales since October 2012, which superseded the force's in-house Cleveland Air Operations Unit. NPAS assets, including helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft, support tasks such as suspect pursuits, missing person searches, and event monitoring, with deployments coordinated via a 24/7 operations center. Response times from the nearest NPAS base, such as Newcastle, average 20-22 minutes to Cleveland's operational area. Cleveland Police facilitates this service through officer secondments to NPAS, typically for five-year terms with possible renewals, ensuring force-specific input into aerial tactics and equipment use. The force maintains no dedicated aviation assets, relying fully on NPAS for borderless, rapid-response air coverage.[118][119][120][121]Performance and Efficiency
PEEL Inspection Assessments
In the PEEL (police effectiveness, efficiency, and legitimacy) assessment for 2023–2025, published by His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) on 10 April 2025, Cleveland Police was judged "good" in four areas, "adequate" in two areas, and "requires improvement" in two areas across eight graded aspects of policing performance.[10][122] The ungraded ninth area focused on the force's contribution to the strategic policing requirement. HMICFRS highlighted progress in building a strong workforce and preventing crime, with the report noting that the force had made advancements in addressing prior weaknesses, though further improvements were needed in areas such as responding to the public and protecting vulnerable people.[123][10] This marked a notable enhancement from the preceding 2021–2022 PEEL inspection, published on 17 March 2023, where Cleveland Police received "good" ratings in only one area—crime data integrity—and "adequate" in four others, with multiple areas rated "requires improvement" or lower.[124][125] A cause of concern raised in September 2023 regarding the force's incomplete resolution of deficiencies in preventing crime and antisocial behaviour had been partially mitigated by the 2023–2025 review, reflecting targeted operational changes.[126] Overall, HMICFRS inspectors found the force had improved in every inspected domain since the prior cycle, attributing gains to leadership focus on vulnerability identification and resource allocation, despite ongoing demands from high crime volumes in the region.[10][127]Crime Reduction and Statistical Trends
In the 12 months ending June 2024, Cleveland Police recorded a total of 74,928 crimes, representing an 11% reduction (8,920 fewer offences) compared to the previous year.[128] This equates to a crime rate of 129.3 offences per 1,000 population, higher than the most similar forces average of 109.8 but indicative of downward pressure on overall volume.[128] Neighbourhood crimes fell by 10.2% (1,022 fewer incidents), from 9,902 to 8,886, with targeted interventions in Middlesbrough yielding an 18% drop in Safer Streets programme areas.[129][128]| Crime Type | Reduction (%) | Fewer Incidents | Previous Year Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Theft from the Person | 44 | 231 | 530 |
| Residential Burglary | 18.6 | 764 | 4,106 |
| Robbery | 14 | 130 | 951 |
| Domestic Abuse | 9.2 | 1,342 | 14,553 |
| Serious Violence | 8.5 | 169 | 1,988 |