I have said before that I work in a regulated profession and a conviction for anything related to dishonesty would be an issue. I wouldn't want to take the risk of not disclosing it either. This means that if a TOC began a prosecution process, even if I was 100% sure that I was in the right, I would ultimately pay what they ask for. I couldn't risk taking it to court and the judge disagreeing with me. We have seen many cases here where they use this imbalance of power to extort sums of money from people who have a legitimate case.As I mentioned on another thread, be careful what you wish for.
Almost all of the people who end up getting convicted of crimes on the National Rail network are people who failed to engage with multiple contacts and attempts to settle out of court.
If you migrate to a civil system dealt with via the county court, there does not seem to me to be reason to suggest that these people would suddenly start engaging and settling. So you would replace:
So again, be careful what you wish for.
- A 6 month limit for bringing proceedings with 6 years (5 in Scotland)
- Bulk processing through SJP with bulk processing through the county court business centre
- A 1 year period during which the case "remains on your record" with 6 years
- A criminal record (if any) that has a minimal effect for most job applications with a CCJ that has a real-life effect on obtaining financial products
- For people who missed their case for whatever reason and wanted it reopening, a statutory declaration costing at most £5 with a set-aside N244 application costing £303
Contrast that with a CCJ where I can take my argument to the court and the judge will assess the situation. If the railway company wins, fine, I pay them and the matter is over (and if paid within 28 days the CCJ has no impact on my credit report).
At the very least, use the penalty fares system as intended - why are Northern pursuing so many cases in this manner when they could pursue them via a penalty fare system which has a (not good) appeal system, but is essentially decriminalised if you appeal the penalty fare.