But just to clarify, you won't potentially be taken to court and asked to bend over for £500-1000 in fines, costs and surcharges, and given a criminal record.Yes, and no. If you were somehow allowed to board, and then arrive at your destination, you could still fail to negotiate passport control. And even if you can sort out a renewed passport quite quickly and return for another flight, you'll have to pay again for the privilege.
Nobody is saying there are no consequences to failing to bring your passport, just that they don't involve the company issuing a nice fat summons for a crime because of privileges they have owing to an accident of history.
And, if you get to the border and you are turned away due to no passport, it is the airline who is responsible for returning you, usually at their own cost. In the situation you describe, the airline also gets fined for being very bad at their job, even if you lost your passport enroute - a strict liability of sorts.
The airline here enforces passport checks because it is in their interest to do so and because a third party needs to be satisfied with your right of entry. The railway enforces railcard checks for no reason other than its lack of innovation in having a more secure discount system, and because frankly, it dislikes and suspects its customers in a way most businesses do not. They are grasping, underfunded entities who go after "fare evaders" (most people are not actually *evading*) to supplement their subsidies and because they are expensive to use, and the public like to see that some other people are getting done in by the cruelty of the system because it's "fare evaders" making the trains expensive and definitely not a political choice.
I've no sympathy for the worst grifters, but the railway hypocritically operates a policy of:
- slapping people with large settlements or prosecuting avoidant or impoverished customers for misdemeanours like forgetting to renew one's railcard, and claiming the public interest test for criminalisation is met if they didn't get an obsequious letter generated from a consumer advice forum (a forum which they read lol), and
- letting credentialed and publicly trusted professionals like nurses, solicitors, and chartered accountants who evade thousands of pounds deliberately, avoid prosecution if they just pay the fares back plus £150, with no public interest test at all - just whether they can get some money back
It is totally perverse and not in any way, shape or form a way any competent prosecuting authority, or almost any other customer focused business, would run itself.