IPS ARPIT JAIN
Formative Years

Formative Years

Personal Philosophy

Education & Career Transition

Dr. Jain completed his MBBS from Banaras Hindu University (BHU), Varanasi, one of India’s leading medical institutions. His time in medicine shaped his understanding of discipline, ethics, and the importance of listening to people’s stories, not just their symptoms.

Over time, Dr. Jain began to feel that many of the issues he was encountering had roots beyond the hospital: in systems, governance, and institutions. This led him to a deeper realisation: meaningful societal healing often requires work at the level of policy and public administration.

Driven by this purpose, Dr. Jain prepared for and cleared the UPSC Civil Services Examination twice, eventually joining the Indian Police Service (IPS). For him, this was not a rejection of medicine, but an extension of the same value: service to people, now at a broader scale.

Law Enforcement & Public Service Work

As a senior field officer, Dr. Jain has worked across multiple core areas of policing, including:

District Policing

Serving as a District Superintendent of Police across different jurisdictions, managing law and order, crime prevention, and community engagement.

District Policing
Economic Offences

Economic Offences &
Cyber-Enabled Crime

Leading the Economic Offences Wing and supervising investigations into financial frauds and technology-enabled crimes, with a focus on transparency and due process.

Technology &
Data-Driven Policing

Strengthening digital policing practices, cyber awareness mechanisms, and coordinated responses to online threats. He actively works on integrating AI and data analytics into policing workflows for better prediction, prevention, and response.

Technology Policing

In each role, his emphasis remains on clarity in process, precision in execution, and accessibility for citizens. He believes that people should find the police system understandable, responsive, and fair.

Medico-Legal Contribution

Dr. Jain’s background as a doctor and his experience as a police officer give him a unique vantage point at the intersection of medicine, law, and justice.

He is part of a team preparing a medico-legal reference manual for Haryana, aimed at strengthening the interface between healthcare professionals and investigative agencies. The goal is to help ensure that medical evidence is handled with clarity and consistency, improving both fairness in investigation and outcomes at trial.

Dr. Jain’s work in this area is guided by a simple belief: strong medico-legal systems protect both victims and the integrity of justice.

Personal Philosophy