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Another professional fare dodger (and 3rd rail in Oxon ?)
wrote:
On Fri, 02 Oct 2015 14:58:38 +0100 e27002 aurora wrote: On Fri, 2 Oct 2015 06:16:58 -0700 (PDT), Offramp wrote: The fare dodger was described as a barrister but he was also given the title Dr. He must be very clever! Perhaps he has a PhD in Law? Or, he may have studied multiple disciplines. He was certainly smart enough to scam the idiotic Oyster system. You have to hand it to the guy - he saved himself 20K. The only reason he was caught is because he handed himself in. I doubt they'd have bothered to trace him otherwise - after all, at the time as far as they were concerned he'd simply been charged maximum fare for not touching in. He didn't scam Oyster. As you say, he paid more on Oyster than he needed to. He scammed Chiltern, and it was Chiltern staff who spotted it. |
Another professional fare dodger (and 3rd rail in Oxon ?)
On Friday, 2 October 2015 16:04:38 UTC+1, wrote:
On Fri, 02 Oct 2015 14:58:38 +0100 e27002 aurora wrote: On Fri, 2 Oct 2015 06:16:58 -0700 (PDT), Offramp wrote: The fare dodger was described as a barrister but he was also given the title Dr. He must be very clever! Perhaps he has a PhD in Law? Or, he may have studied multiple disciplines. He was certainly smart enough to scam the idiotic Oyster system. You have to hand it to the guy - he saved himself 20K. The only reason he was caught is because he handed himself in. I doubt they'd have bothered to trace him otherwise - after all, at the time as far as they were concerned he'd simply been charged maximum fare for not touching in. It wasn't REALLY 20,000£, as the judge spotted. Chiltern, as they are entitled to, were basing the fare avoided on a standard return fare for every journey. The eventual comp was based, more realistically, on the amount evaded if weekly tickets were involved. |
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