modernrail
Established Member
- Joined
- 26 Jul 2015
- Messages
- 1,260
A friend has received a letter from WMT accusing her of fraud.
The letter is shockingly bad in terms of grammar and details bearing in mind the nature of accusation and so she is going back to them to provide a letter that actually makes sense and is written in English. However, she thinks it might relate to a journey in May 2024 where she hadn’t realised her network railcard had expired. When this was pointed out by the guard she paid a new full price fare. She does not remember being told further action might take place.
The letter is also from the Digital Fraud Department, if that is relevant. It ask her to provide further evidence that ‘none of the relevant legislation has been contravened’. A bit difficult when the letter doesn’t actually make any sense in the first place or actually specify the journey to which they are referring.
She is pretty distressed about the whole thing. A letter out of the blue accusing her of fraud in very serious terms, for an incident she thought was dealt with there and then.
Bearing in mind it is pretty easy to forget a railcard expiry date is the general approach not completely over the top? Why make an accusation of fraud in such vague terms over 6 months after the incident and threatening the ‘full force of the law’ rather than just issuing some sort of fixed penalty notice.
Also, has the guard not open and closed the matter by charging a full fare on the day?
The letter is shockingly bad in terms of grammar and details bearing in mind the nature of accusation and so she is going back to them to provide a letter that actually makes sense and is written in English. However, she thinks it might relate to a journey in May 2024 where she hadn’t realised her network railcard had expired. When this was pointed out by the guard she paid a new full price fare. She does not remember being told further action might take place.
The letter is also from the Digital Fraud Department, if that is relevant. It ask her to provide further evidence that ‘none of the relevant legislation has been contravened’. A bit difficult when the letter doesn’t actually make any sense in the first place or actually specify the journey to which they are referring.
She is pretty distressed about the whole thing. A letter out of the blue accusing her of fraud in very serious terms, for an incident she thought was dealt with there and then.
Bearing in mind it is pretty easy to forget a railcard expiry date is the general approach not completely over the top? Why make an accusation of fraud in such vague terms over 6 months after the incident and threatening the ‘full force of the law’ rather than just issuing some sort of fixed penalty notice.
Also, has the guard not open and closed the matter by charging a full fare on the day?