Burscough Bridge has a ticket office which should be open before the first Manchester bound train and there are no signs telling you, you can buy on the train (in fact most Northern stations now have a sign or poster saying you must buy before you board). Unless the ticket office was closed for some reason or a railway official told the OP they could board without a ticket then the OP has committed an offence under railway byelaws. The fact that the conductors credit card machine wasn't working should be irrelevant as the OP should have had a ticket before boarding the train. Whilst there are no penalty fares in Northern, normal conditions of carriage apply.
I
don't think this is helpful, and no-one would be prosecuted for buying on board a Northern train from Burscough. What happened before the OP got to his destination is, largely, irrelevant as it appears the OP is being prosecuted for asking for a ticket for only a small portion of his journey, which means he is likely being charged under the 1889 Regulation of Railways Act.
Given that the fare from Salford Crescent is around £2 and from Burscough is £7 or £8 dependant on type of ticket, surely the OP must have noticed the fare was too cheap even if they had asked for the wrong ticket by mistake. Had the OP not been challenged, then they would have walked away without paying the correct fare.
That will probably be what the prosecution will allege, yes.
while not condoning your wrong ticketing purchasing, did the ticket inspector only know that you had not bought the correct ticket because you told him? I'm a bit confused as to why he wanted to look at your ticket straight after you had bought it?
The inspector must have been aware of the conversation at the ticket window.
This thread isnt about the value of fares on the railway. Its someone who has a serious problem on their hands because they have fraudulently bought a ticket that they should not have bought and have now got caught doing so.
If you unable to give proper and helpful advice rather then what you did post then you should really stay quite far away from the thread in itself.
Agreed. I would say that it works both ways; people who are unable to provide helpful advice and just want to moan at fares being poor value while not discussing the fares in question in the topic, especially on a topic where someone needs advice, should really consider not posting. Likewise someone who wants to have a moan at passengers (whether in general or referring to the OP) and not provide advice to the customers who request it, should consider leaving the thread alone too. That way a thread won't get hijacked by a debate between two completely opposing 'sides' on completely off-topic matters

Well, I can wish!
I was called a troll who should be moderated for arguing that the chap (taken only on his version of events) doesn't sound like a criminal. It's an opinion. message boards....opinions... ya know?
If you have a problem with a name you have been called on any post, click the report icon
in the bottom left corner of that post, and refer the matters to moderators for consideration. Nothing will be gained by discussing it on this, or any other, thread.
Hang on a tickety-boo. As long as I am allowed to do so I shall put the rail users point of view.
There's no point in posting from a "rail users" point of view in a thread where someone may be prosecuted and seeks advice. He needs advice from legal experts (e.g.
DaveNewcastle) or experts in the field of revenue collection (e.g.
kwvr45).