With the majority of people preferring an out of court settlement rather than a conviction, how likely is that they will get one.
Obviously this differs from company to company and offence to offence with many mitigating and aggravating factors, but is there any clear and obvious patterns to these offences. Such as doughnuting on SWR or having an Invalid railcard on GWR. With the forum experiencing many of the same issues being invalid railcards, short fareing and not having a ticket all with different factors. How likely is it that people will avoid court and get offered an out of court settlement from different railways for different offences.
Take this as the standard most average and common offence, for example, Having a railcard expired for 5 months and using it for 15 journeys or so, or getting stopped with a shorter fare and being seen to have done this multiple times.
It would be helpful if there was something like a table that said something like:
GWR- no railcard from 1-20 journeys- normally offered
SWR- no railcard from 1-20 journeys normally offered.
Obviously this differs from company to company and offence to offence with many mitigating and aggravating factors, but is there any clear and obvious patterns to these offences. Such as doughnuting on SWR or having an Invalid railcard on GWR. With the forum experiencing many of the same issues being invalid railcards, short fareing and not having a ticket all with different factors. How likely is it that people will avoid court and get offered an out of court settlement from different railways for different offences.
Take this as the standard most average and common offence, for example, Having a railcard expired for 5 months and using it for 15 journeys or so, or getting stopped with a shorter fare and being seen to have done this multiple times.
It would be helpful if there was something like a table that said something like:
GWR- no railcard from 1-20 journeys- normally offered
SWR- no railcard from 1-20 journeys normally offered.