In 1921 Rice-Oxley emigrated to
North Borneo to join the
North Borneo Armed Constabulary, and was appointed as an officer of Class B in the following year, with the rank of captain. His duties included showing visitors around and, in 1926, while motoring with the author
Somerset Maugham, Rice-Oxley came across a 13-foot (4-metre) snake and killed it with his malacca cane. He was appointed Superintendent of Police, Adjutant, and Superintendent of Prisons, in
Jesselton in 1929. His career continued apace and he attained the position of
Commandant of the Constabulary. On 12 November 1936 he officially changed his name from Alan Rice Oxley to Alan Rice-Oxley by
deed poll. In early 1937 he married Valerie Helen Gardner. Valerie was the widow of a fellow former RAF officer, Herbert Gardner, who had left the RAF in 1926 to move to the
Federated Malay States, but was killed in
Marseille in 1929. After their marriage the coupled sailed in May 1937 from London on the
P&O SS Ranchi; after the outbreak of the second World War the couple returned to England; later during the war Valerie remained in England when Rice-Oxley returned to North Borneo. From September 1942 to January 1943, Rice-Oxley was interned by the administration of
Japanese Borneo at
Berhala Island, where in his duties as the Commandant of the Constabulary, he led an active intelligence network and resistance against the Japanese occupation. In January, Rice-Oxley was moved to
Batu Lintang camp near
Kuching,
Sarawak. He is buried in the churchyard of St. Mary Magdalene,
Loders, Dorset. ==Honours and awards==