Council wrongly attempting to fine for littering
Council wrongly attempting to fine for littering
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Mr_Megalomaniac

Original Poster:

1,155 posts

88 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
Hello PH, I have a question based on a letter my wife has received from a London borough.

They have a picture of a package wrapper with her name and our address on. It has been found in a random location that we have never been within miles of ever.
It seems fairly evident that either it was one of those lost deliveries that made the news around June, or potentially has been blown about out of the rubbish truck at some point.

Nevertheless, they have issued an FPN to her for littering, despite the fact she has never been anywhere near the location, and the fact that the fault would lie either with the delivery company or refuse removal service.

She has already written to contest this, but unsurprisingly the brains at the council can't understand that and say that the address on the package means it was "linked to our address". And that's that - they want her to contest in a Magistrate's Court as apparently they have no grounds for appeal on FPNs.

Any advice or help here?
Many thanks in advance.

anonymous-user

76 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
Tell them to take her to court, inform the Mags that you have never been to that location and, quite clearly, an item could end up just about anywhere by an infinte list of means. I’d be inclined to first ask the council to disclose their evidence of your wife having commited the offence, which of course will be zero; you can then point this out in court. Utterly desperate, what a bunch of complete muppets.

Edited to add: They may well try to imply that you have used the services of a private waste carrier who has improperly disposed of the waste. If you can confirm that you have not, that will presumably help.

Mr_Megalomaniac

Original Poster:

1,155 posts

88 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
Southerner said:
Tell them to take her to court, inform the Mags that you have never been to that location and, quite clearly, an item could end up just about anywhere by an infinte list of means. I’d be inclined to first ask the council to disclose their evidence of your wife having commited the offence, which of course will be zero; you can then point this out in court. Utterly desperate, what a bunch of complete muppets.

Edited to add: They may well try to imply that you have used the services of a private waste carrier who has improperly disposed of the waste. If you can confirm that you have not, that will presumably help.
Thanks! Yup it seems that's the route we'll be going given their reply. It's odd that they're basically in breach of all of the Government's and DEFRA's guidance on application of FPNs here but seem to be trying to proceed anyway, a bunch of muppets indeed.

Yup that's correct we haven't had any private waste carriers. Just the usual county council refuse removal service once a week.

Speed Badger

3,463 posts

139 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
Only one thing to do. Go down to the council offices and dominate their stairs.

s p a c e m a n

11,576 posts

170 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
Tear off their name and return address from their letter, put it on the floor and photograph it, send them a fine for littering.

Austin_Metro

1,421 posts

70 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
s p a c e m a n said:
Tear off their name and return address from their letter, put it on the floor and photograph it, send them a fine for littering.
Winner. Or ask them on the basis of your photographic evidence to issue a FPN to the responsible body.

petrolbloke

520 posts

179 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
Austin_Metro said:
s p a c e m a n said:
Tear off their name and return address from their letter, put it on the floor and photograph it, send them a fine for littering.
Winner. Or ask them on the basis of your photographic evidence to issue a FPN to the responsible body.
Sounds like something Joe Lycett would do. It could just work!

You could also contact your MP or the media.

Canon_Fodder

1,775 posts

85 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
This is an unpleasant situation OP...

Likely a fly-tip site has been trawled by the council for evidence of the guilty party and for whatever reason your old packaging was part of the dumped waste.

A jury would not convict - but one wonders if magistrates go on 'probability' basis and wave these through on the council say-so unless you can 'prove the negative' of your non-involvement in the dumping.

I suggest one of those £5 legal advice sites might be worth your while?


zarjaz1991

5,687 posts

145 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
It’s for the council to prove you are guilty.
You need to ask them to provide the evidence they intend to rely on.

They won’t have any.

Austin_Metro

1,421 posts

70 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
What’s a “package wrapper”?

If it was say, a letter, sent to you then it’s seems just as likely the post office lost it. Or the sender.

If it’s criminal and beyond reasonable doubt applies as the standard of proof those alternatives suggest there is doubt.

Tell us what it was and we can come up with reasonable doubt…


Mr_Megalomaniac

Original Poster:

1,155 posts

88 months

Tuesday 8th August 2023
quotequote all
petrolbloke said:
Austin_Metro said:
s p a c e m a n said:
Tear off their name and return address from their letter, put it on the floor and photograph it, send them a fine for littering.
Winner. Or ask them on the basis of your photographic evidence to issue a FPN to the responsible body.
Sounds like something Joe Lycett would do. It could just work!

You could also contact your MP or the media.
Honestly considering the label once it's all said and done - they outsource their backoffice so I wonder if the directors' might be persueded to see reason with a taste of their own medicine.

Canon_Fodder said:
This is an unpleasant situation OP...

Likely a fly-tip site has been trawled by the council for evidence of the guilty party and for whatever reason your old packaging was part of the dumped waste.

A jury would not convict - but one wonders if magistrates go on 'probability' basis and wave these through on the council say-so unless you can 'prove the negative' of your non-involvement in the dumping.

I suggest one of those £5 legal advice sites might be worth your while?
It seems like precisely that judging that the picture has a number of dumped parcels and the street location looks to be near a number of large recycling & other waste bins. Might go down the legal advice route.

zarjaz1991 said:
It’s for the council to prove you are guilty.
You need to ask them to provide the evidence they intend to rely on.

They won’t have any.
I agree. They have the picture of the parcel stacked with a host of others. Already clearly disposed of and torn open, so not sure how they thought it sensible, but alas.

Austin_Metro said:
What’s a “package wrapper”?

If it was say, a letter, sent to you then it’s seems just as likely the post office lost it. Or the sender.

If it’s criminal and beyond reasonable doubt applies as the standard of proof those alternatives suggest there is doubt.

Tell us what it was and we can come up with reasonable doubt…
It was a package for some baby clothing items, comes in one of those grey/white plastic bags that one tears open and then can toss in the bin. In the picture sent it is obvious it was torn open to take the items out (when we received it weeks prior) and then we've thrown it out. Now somehow it has gone from the household refuse to a set of bins in another council.

QBee

22,072 posts

166 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
Buy a shredder. It has surprised me how much confidential stuff we throw away, never mind the business stuff I generate managing business finances from home.

Dynion Araf Uchaf

5,041 posts

245 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
QBee said:
Buy a shredder. It has surprised me how much confidential stuff we throw away, never mind the business stuff I generate managing business finances from home.
And how would that help in this instance?

Teddy Lop

8,301 posts

89 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
That's absurd, given the trail of debris our local binmen often leave in their wake.

I could be wrong about this but be careful with "see you in court", my understanding of parking fines is that they take you to court for non payment of the fine - which will have now escalated to a tasty 500 or whatever - rather than the offence itself. Which of course you're guilty of, regardless of the pretext.

These are your rights.

Fast and Spurious

1,802 posts

110 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
QBee said:
Buy a shredder. It has surprised me how much confidential stuff we throw away, never mind the business stuff I generate managing business finances from home.
Our addresses are confidential now?

200Plus Club

12,870 posts

300 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
Dynion Araf Uchaf said:
And how would that help in this instance?
Was thinking exactly the same, unless it's an AI shredder of some sort that can manage his case and represent him in court perhaps? It is remarkable what "they" can do these days....

Colonel Cupcake

1,325 posts

67 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
Did you, in fact, receive the package?

If not, did you email the buyer to claim a non-delivery?

If you can show you never got the item, that should go a long way to showing that you never dumped it.

QBee

22,072 posts

166 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
200Plus Club said:
Dynion Araf Uchaf said:
And how would that help in this instance?
Was thinking exactly the same, unless it's an AI shredder of some sort that can manage his case and represent him in court perhaps? It is remarkable what "they" can do these days....
It won't help with the litter already found by the council, but I advocate being in the habit of shredding things with your address or other personal information on, rather than throwing them in the bin whole. It would seem to me to be a good idea, given the number of thieves and scammers that are around these days. A similar approach to what you put online is not a bad idea either.

I got a shredder because I was printing and later discarding a lot of confidentail banking and accounting information relating to my clients, but the habit of shreddingbefore binning has now extended to my personal stuff too

steveo3002

11,033 posts

196 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
Fast and Spurious said:
QBee said:
Buy a shredder. It has surprised me how much confidential stuff we throw away, never mind the business stuff I generate managing business finances from home.
Our addresses are confidential now?
they are when this happens lol

ive seen a trail of rubbish left behind the bin men , theyre the only people that cause litter /mess in out little village , so yes i do the same all names /address destroyed because i can see exactly what the o.p got coming to me

vikingaero

12,230 posts

191 months

Wednesday 9th August 2023
quotequote all
Fast and Spurious said:
QBee said:
Buy a shredder. It has surprised me how much confidential stuff we throw away, never mind the business stuff I generate managing business finances from home.
Our addresses are confidential now?
Of course they are. No-one knows I live at 39 Letsby Avenue, Grim-up-north-town.

If I were the OP, I'd gather some basic info for a few days before the alleged offence and for the day of the offence - say debit card statement showing you were miles away beforehand, or say you can obtain work CCTV showing you as being present.