Satya Pal Singh is a retired
IPS officer of
Maharashtra cadre and 1980 batch. Singh's first posting was as Assistant Superintendent of Police of
Nasik. He then went on to become the Superintendent of Police of Buldhana. Prior to being appointed the
Mumbai Police chief, Singh was Maharashtra's Additional Director General of Police. He also served as the Joint Commissioner of Police (Crime) in Mumbai. During the same time in the late '90s, when gangland activity was at its peak in Mumbai and the mafia in Mumbai went berserk with several high-profile killings, Singh formed special police squads and cracked down on several underworld figures. That tenure saw several encounter killings in Mumbai with specialists such as
Daya Nayak,
Pradeep Sharma and
Vijay Salaskar given the licence to take on the underworld. It was during this stint that the
25 August 2003 Mumbai bombings at
Gateway of India and
Zaveri Bazaar took place; he is credited with having been the officer at the helm when the case was detected. As Police Commissioner of
Nagpur, he began an outreach programme called Mission Mrityunjay. This was an anti terror initiative that aimed to enlist college students in the fight against terrorism whereby students recommended by college authorities assisted the police in intelligence gathering and reported suspicious and anti-social activities on campus and in the city. Apart from fighting terrorism, the police hoped that these Mrityunjay Clubs would help develop communal and social harmony among the youth and improve their relationship with the police. During his stint 386 such clubs were formed in the city. Identical programmes were launched in Pune as well as Mumbai during his tenure as the Police Chief of the respective cities. In Pune, the city police had reached out to 122 senior colleges and 86 junior colleges through Mission Mrityunjay. However, this programme met with some rough weather during its trial in
Mumbai as its legitimacy and choice of name was questioned by the State Minorities Commission. During this stint he famously courted controversy by taking on his own boss, the then Maharashtra Home minister Ramesh Bagwe, when he refused clearance to renew Bagwe's passport since the minister had no less than 19 cases pending against him, some allegedly criminal. When Singh refused to buckle under political pressure, he was shunted out to the Establishment Wing of
Maharashtra Police. On 23 August 2012, Singh was appointed as the Police Commissioner of
Mumbai after his predecessor Arup Patnaik was facing flak and eventually shunted out for his handling of the
Azad Maidan riots that occurred on 11 August in the city. Several policemen were injured in that melee.
Maharashtra Navnirman Sena chief
Raj Thackeray, during a massive rally in Mumbai, had demanded immediate ouster of Patnaik over the violence at Azad Maidan, for allegedly failing to control the situation during a demonstration to protest alleged persecution of Muslims in Assam and Myanmar. Patnaik was also in line of fire by the Opposition for handling of the Azad Maidan mayhem. On 31 January 2014 Singh tendered his resignation and applied for the voluntary retirement scheme (VRS) and sought to be relieved as soon as possible from his post so he could contest the upcoming national elections. Home Minister
RR Patil, who belonged to the
Nationalist Congress Party, announced that Dr Singh's application was accepted with immediate effect. The Democratic Front government in Maharashtra was in a hurry to process the VRS application for voluntary retirement mainly to facilitate his joining the
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and to possibly enable him to attend a rally in Meerut and join the party in the presence of Gujarat CM
Narendra Modi and BJP chief
Rajnath Singh. Singh was the first serving Police Commissioner of Mumbai to resign from his post. He has also been on deputation to the CBI.
Positions held • Superintendent of Police,
Gadchiroli district • Superintendent of Police,
Nasik district • Superintendent of Police,
Buldhana district • Inspector General of Police,
Nagpur Range • Joint Commissioner of Police (Crime), Mumbai • Special Inspector General,
Konkan Range • Police Commissioner, Nagpur • Police Commissioner,
Pune • Additional Director General of Police (ADGP Establishment and Law & Order), Maharashtra • Police Commissioner, Mumbai ==Political career==