Zoo2022
New Member
Hi guys,
I'm hoping for some advice on a very regrettable situation I find myself in. I have just received a "notice of intended prosecution" letter directly from Chiltern Railways to respond within 14 days. Alarmingly I only just received this letter and it is dated 8 days ago , so I only have a few days left to respond!
A few months ago I was caught at London Marylebone without a valid ticket. Essentially I had purchased the start and end of my journey which was a very silly thing to do. Out of panic I initially lied to the fraud investigator officer (who took me to the side after I collected paper tickets) saying I had traveled from Wembley, but then soon after I admitted that I had traveled further afield. After this point it was a polite interaction and I answered all questions honestly. I did not realise the seriousness of the offence until this point, and the officer mentioned possible court action /or more likely an out of court settlement as I was polite and cooperative.
This was bad enough, however in the letter I have just received, following a data access request on my Trainline account, they have claimed that I have submitted several suspicious refund claims in a 3 year period. They have said they are giving me the opportunity to inform them of any mitigation, and in absence of satisfactory explanation, they have evidence to prosecute. Legislation mentioned they are considering is offence against Railway Byelaws 2005, RoRA 1889, or the Fraud Act 2006.
Looking back at old emails, the refunds seem to mostly be short couple of quid journeys. I was at university during these years and there seemed to be many other students freely doing/encouraging this, so I did not know any better. So there is a chance it may have occurred, but I feel like I need to know what exactly they are referring to and the dates in question. Despite this, I can recall some of the refunds definitely being legitimate (i.e genuine mistakes, or the train was so busy/ or I missed it , so would quickly run to a bus very close by, ), so I am concerned some might be genuine refunds but considered fraudulent in the eyes of Chiltern. I'm pretty sure most of these trains were not Chiltern services but another train company (West Midlands Railway) (not sure if that matters?)
I am currently drafting a letter in response and I have so far stated how sorry and disappointed I am in myself, that I have learnt from this incident, I do not wish to leave them out of pocket as fare evasion costs the railways millions (so would pay any outstanding fares and administrative costs), and I would like to settle the matter without the need of court action.
Any advice on how to respond to the suspicious refund claims to increase my chances of achieving a good outcome ( i.e out of court settlement, not a prosecution) would be much appreciated. Any helpful comments are welcomed. This has been quite a stressful ordeal over the last few months and seems to have built up to this crucial moment!
I'm hoping for some advice on a very regrettable situation I find myself in. I have just received a "notice of intended prosecution" letter directly from Chiltern Railways to respond within 14 days. Alarmingly I only just received this letter and it is dated 8 days ago , so I only have a few days left to respond!
A few months ago I was caught at London Marylebone without a valid ticket. Essentially I had purchased the start and end of my journey which was a very silly thing to do. Out of panic I initially lied to the fraud investigator officer (who took me to the side after I collected paper tickets) saying I had traveled from Wembley, but then soon after I admitted that I had traveled further afield. After this point it was a polite interaction and I answered all questions honestly. I did not realise the seriousness of the offence until this point, and the officer mentioned possible court action /or more likely an out of court settlement as I was polite and cooperative.
This was bad enough, however in the letter I have just received, following a data access request on my Trainline account, they have claimed that I have submitted several suspicious refund claims in a 3 year period. They have said they are giving me the opportunity to inform them of any mitigation, and in absence of satisfactory explanation, they have evidence to prosecute. Legislation mentioned they are considering is offence against Railway Byelaws 2005, RoRA 1889, or the Fraud Act 2006.
Looking back at old emails, the refunds seem to mostly be short couple of quid journeys. I was at university during these years and there seemed to be many other students freely doing/encouraging this, so I did not know any better. So there is a chance it may have occurred, but I feel like I need to know what exactly they are referring to and the dates in question. Despite this, I can recall some of the refunds definitely being legitimate (i.e genuine mistakes, or the train was so busy/ or I missed it , so would quickly run to a bus very close by, ), so I am concerned some might be genuine refunds but considered fraudulent in the eyes of Chiltern. I'm pretty sure most of these trains were not Chiltern services but another train company (West Midlands Railway) (not sure if that matters?)
I am currently drafting a letter in response and I have so far stated how sorry and disappointed I am in myself, that I have learnt from this incident, I do not wish to leave them out of pocket as fare evasion costs the railways millions (so would pay any outstanding fares and administrative costs), and I would like to settle the matter without the need of court action.
Any advice on how to respond to the suspicious refund claims to increase my chances of achieving a good outcome ( i.e out of court settlement, not a prosecution) would be much appreciated. Any helpful comments are welcomed. This has been quite a stressful ordeal over the last few months and seems to have built up to this crucial moment!
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