chilternrail12
Member
Hi All,
I wanted to get some advice from forum members regarding a fare evasion notice I am due to recieve...
I have just received a letter from Chiltern Railways regarding an incident in February 2023. I had bought a ticket infront of a revenue protection officer between gerrards cross and high wycombe, and he took my details down. In the letter I have just received, Chiltern railways are accusing me of avoiding my correct fare on over 200 other occasions in the past year (sounds about right) and I am worried about the actions they might take against me. Is the chance of me receiving an out of court settlement high?
A copy of letter is below:
Dear Mr XXX,
We are in receipt of a report, which advises that on xxth February 2023, a person giving your name and details was spoken to by railway revenue protection staff in connection with a journey between Gerrards Cross and High Wycombe, at the time you failed to show a valid rail ticket for the rail journey that you were making or had made.
Following you being spoken to; the Fraud Investigation Unit submitted a data access request under Schedule 2 Part 1 Paragraph 2 of the Data Protection Act 2018 and GDPR Article 6 (1) (d), to various rail ticket retailers, which has revealed that you may have avoided your correct on xxx other occasions, from March 2022 to March 2023.
The purpose of this letter is to advise you of the report, of any action that my follow from it and to provide you with the opportunity to inform us of any mitigation that you may wish to be considered. This can be sent to the address shown above, or via email; [email protected]
The report of this incident indicates that in the absence of a satisfactory explanation, evidence does exist to warrant a prosecution in accordance with current legislation. These considerations may include whether any charge should allege an offence against Railway Byelaws (2005), or the Regulation of Railways act 1889.
The company considers this a serious matter, and if we do not hear from you within 14 days of the date of this letter, a summons to a Magistrate's court hearing may be issued without further reference to you.
I am very keen to avoid going to court over this, I am starting University this September and the idea of a criminal conviction worries me. Any advice is greatly appreciated!
I wanted to get some advice from forum members regarding a fare evasion notice I am due to recieve...
I have just received a letter from Chiltern Railways regarding an incident in February 2023. I had bought a ticket infront of a revenue protection officer between gerrards cross and high wycombe, and he took my details down. In the letter I have just received, Chiltern railways are accusing me of avoiding my correct fare on over 200 other occasions in the past year (sounds about right) and I am worried about the actions they might take against me. Is the chance of me receiving an out of court settlement high?
A copy of letter is below:
Dear Mr XXX,
We are in receipt of a report, which advises that on xxth February 2023, a person giving your name and details was spoken to by railway revenue protection staff in connection with a journey between Gerrards Cross and High Wycombe, at the time you failed to show a valid rail ticket for the rail journey that you were making or had made.
Following you being spoken to; the Fraud Investigation Unit submitted a data access request under Schedule 2 Part 1 Paragraph 2 of the Data Protection Act 2018 and GDPR Article 6 (1) (d), to various rail ticket retailers, which has revealed that you may have avoided your correct on xxx other occasions, from March 2022 to March 2023.
The purpose of this letter is to advise you of the report, of any action that my follow from it and to provide you with the opportunity to inform us of any mitigation that you may wish to be considered. This can be sent to the address shown above, or via email; [email protected]
The report of this incident indicates that in the absence of a satisfactory explanation, evidence does exist to warrant a prosecution in accordance with current legislation. These considerations may include whether any charge should allege an offence against Railway Byelaws (2005), or the Regulation of Railways act 1889.
The company considers this a serious matter, and if we do not hear from you within 14 days of the date of this letter, a summons to a Magistrate's court hearing may be issued without further reference to you.
I am very keen to avoid going to court over this, I am starting University this September and the idea of a criminal conviction worries me. Any advice is greatly appreciated!