Mr Supt Peter Aaronson This is Me
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Trafford General Hospital
Manchester, United Kingdom
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This profile was automatically generated using 4 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 4 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Employment History
View...Web References
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1. Police open their doors for a day
www.messengernewspapers.co.uk/ - [Cached]Published on: 11/15/2005 Last Visited: 11/15/2005
TRAFFORD police's head of operations, Supt Peter Aaronson, retires from the force at the end of the month.
Mr Aaronson, aged 49, has spent his 30-year career with Greater Manchester Police (GMP) and has witnessed at first hand many of the important events and incidents that have shaped the region.
He was one of the first on the scene when inmates at Strangeways rioted; he worked in the clean up operation after the IRA Manchester bomb and helped coordinate Princess Diana's travel plans when she visited the north west.
He's also appeared on TV in the BBC fly on the wall series X-Cars, acted as football match commander at Old Trafford and quite literally had a front seat view of Manchester United's treble victory parade in 1999; driving the open top team bus.
He told Billboard: "I've just been really lucky to have done what I've done and I'd recommend it to anyone as a career."
He spent the first five years based in city centre Manchester before moving to Oldham, in the early 80s, where he worked as a sergeant at the time of the race riots and the miners' strike.
Next he joined the traffic police and, after a spell as an inspector in Bury, moved to the tactical vehicle crime unit in 1993; where he appeared, in a six part TV series, in front of millions of viewers.
He explained: "This was the first series of its kind. It was controversial in its day because it opened up the issue of police pursuit to public debate; which of course is still topical today."
Four years later, now a chief inspector, he moved to Wythenshawe where he says he felt he helped make a real difference.
He explains: "I loved working in Wythenshawe it's a very close community and there's something very unusual about it. The community was so disadvantaged in many ways, they're deserving of so much more and I felt as if we were beginning to do some good."
He was promoted again and moved to Trafford police in 2003.
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Mr Aaronson is joining a private investigations firm specialising in surveillance and industrial crime. -
2. Police chief - 'you're in excellent hands'
www.thisisstretford.co.uk/traf - [Cached]Published on: 10/30/2004 Last Visited: 11/27/2005
TRAFFORD police's head of operations, Supt Peter Aaronson, retires from the force at the end of the month.
Mr Aaronson, aged 49, has spent his 30-year career with Greater Manchester Police (GMP) and has witnessed at first hand many of the important events and incidents that have shaped the region.
He was one of the first on the scene when inmates at Strangeways rioted; he worked in the clean up operation after the IRA Manchester bomb and helped coordinate Princess Diana's travel plans when she visited the north west.
He's also appeared on TV in the BBC fly on the wall series X-Cars, acted as football match commander at Old Trafford and quite literally had a front seat view of Manchester United's treble victory parade in 1999; driving the open top team bus.
He told Billboard: "I've just been really lucky to have done what I've done and I'd recommend it to anyone as a career."
He spent the first five years based in city centre Manchester before moving to Oldham, in the early 80s, where he worked as a sergeant at the time of the race riots and the miners' strike.
Next he joined the traffic police and, after a spell as an inspector in Bury, moved to the tactical vehicle crime unit in 1993; where he appeared, in a six part TV series, in front of millions of viewers.
He explained: "This was the first series of its kind. It was controversial in its day because it opened up the issue of police pursuit to public debate; which of course is still topical today."
Four years later, now a chief inspector, he moved to Wythenshawe where he says he felt he helped make a real difference.
He explains: "I loved working in Wythenshawe it's a very close community and there's something very unusual about it. The community was so disadvantaged in many ways, they're deserving of so much more and I felt as if we were beginning to do some good."
He was promoted again and moved to Trafford police in 2003.
...
Mr Aaronson is joining a private investigations firm specialising in surveillance and industrial crime. -
3. Partners bring down crime
www.thisissaleandaltrincham.co - [Cached]Published on: 10/28/2004 Last Visited: 11/23/2005
TRAFFORD police's head of operations, Supt Peter Aaronson, retires from the force at the end of the month.
Mr Aaronson, aged 49, has spent his 30-year career with Greater Manchester Police (GMP) and has witnessed at first hand many of the important events and incidents that have shaped the region.
He was one of the first on the scene when inmates at Strangeways rioted; he worked in the clean up operation after the IRA Manchester bomb and helped coordinate Princess Diana's travel plans when she visited the north west.
He's also appeared on TV in the BBC fly on the wall series X-Cars, acted as football match commander at Old Trafford and quite literally had a front seat view of Manchester United's treble victory parade in 1999; driving the open top team bus.
He told Billboard: "I've just been really lucky to have done what I've done and I'd recommend it to anyone as a career."
He spent the first five years based in city centre Manchester before moving to Oldham, in the early 80s, where he worked as a sergeant at the time of the race riots and the miners' strike.
Next he joined the traffic police and, after a spell as an inspector in Bury, moved to the tactical vehicle crime unit in 1993; where he appeared, in a six part TV series, in front of millions of viewers.
He explained: "This was the first series of its kind. It was controversial in its day because it opened up the issue of police pursuit to public debate; which of course is still topical today."
Four years later, now a chief inspector, he moved to Wythenshawe where he says he felt he helped make a real difference.
He explains: "I loved working in Wythenshawe it's a very close community and there's something very unusual about it. The community was so disadvantaged in many ways, they're deserving of so much more and I felt as if we were beginning to do some good."
He was promoted again and moved to Trafford police in 2003.
...
Mr Aaronson is joining a private investigations firm specialising in surveillance and industrial crime.

