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Merseyside police appoint first Jewish chaplain

July 29, 2011 09:02
David Coleman with Chief Constable Jon Murphy

ByJonathan Kalmus, Jonathan Kalmus

1 min read

Merseyside Police's chief constable has welcomed the force's first Jewish chaplain who may be called upon to support officers on traumatic crime scenes.

David Coleman, 64, who works for Liverpool's Allerton Synagogue, is the choirmaster at the nearby Childwall Synagogue and is the Merseyside chair for the Community Security Trust. He was welcomed into the police ranks by Chief Constable Jon Murphy last Friday.

Mr Coleman is expected to provide eight hours a month of pastoral care for the force's six active Jewish police officers, although he could be called upon at any time to attend a serious or large-scale crime scene where officers of any faith require counselling or support.

Mr Coleman, who is also the chaplain for the Royal Liverpool Hospital, said a meeting next week would plan the new service. "Part of the remit is for disaster or major murder scenes. I have a lot of experience in dealing with difficult situations, so I think I am mentally prepared, but sometimes you won't know until you arrive at a scene," he added.