JackB
New Member
Hello!Hi everyone, hoping to get an advise regarding my case. I received a notice of intent to prosecute because I travelled with an expired railcard. My railcard expired in Oct 2022 and this happened on 2nd week of January 2023.
What happened was I did not know that the railcard option was ticked so it was a discounted ticket that I have purchased on trainline.
The last time I travelled to London on my own was in October and since then we travelled in groups of 3 or 4 so we always got the groupsave discount and have not really checked that the railcard options was ticked when I travelled solo in January to London. This is the first time this happened to me and not in anyway trying to avoid to pay the right amount of fare.
How bad is this as I am very anxious and scared because I have never been in a situation like this before. Just reading the word magistrates court makes me tremble.
Also since I am not a UK national and do not really travel a lot in the UK aside from going Cambridge to London, I am not very familiar with railway rules/law (if that’s what its called).
Right after speaking to the inspector I tried to renew my railcard as well just to make sure this does not happen again but their system was down and kept trying to buy a new railcard several times but it just kept on saying the same thing, see attached picture.
How should I respond to them?
Thank you so much in advance for your help.
I have a similar case, with my 16-25 railcard expiring in October also. As the ticket was bought over a year ago I just kinda of forgot and lost track. The railcard still worked on the Trainline app and I didn’t see any prompt that it was invalid or needed updating so I didn’t think twice. I don’t have a physical railcard either where I would see it often, it’s tucked behind about 5 button presses in Trainline’s app settings.
Long story short I’m also a student, studying in London. As all young people I figured as it’s online that like all things purchased within apps it would either prompt me to renew, or simply stop working and I would be notified that way.
I travel on return maybe 2-3 times a week from London to Southampton. The price of the tickets I’ve paid for since then is about £280. The railcard gives a 30% discount so the full price would have been £420. But again during this time I was 100% convinced my railcard is active and paid for.
So it’s now early March. I got stopped yesterday at the turnstiles in Waterloo, and they were checking everyone’s tickets. I thought I have nothing to hide so I immediately and kindly showed my railcard - a big surprise to me that it was in fact NOT VALID.
From there I must admit the experience felt intimidating and immediately incriminating. One officer grabbing my phone and held it until a group of 4 more officers came to join us. One of which then took me through a 15 minute interrogation of data and felt very condescending. I just felt like I was immediately criminalised when it was obvious from my reaction and keenness to show my railcard that I the offence was not intentional.
I also want to add in this thread that the officer warned me not to renew my railcard while there as this would be “like setting your pants on fire”. I want to add this here as I’ve not seen this advice from any other examples in these forums. Can I now renew my railcard since the interrogation is done? I still need a railcard to travel, and I can’t afford to wait without one for potentially another few months or more.
At the end I’d been issued with a prosecution statement - looks like a receipt with a reference number and my details. The officer said that I would receive a letter between 6 weeks and a few months about an intent of prosecution in court, and opportunity to write back an explanation.
I’m very anxious now about how next to approach the situation. Should I wait for the letter before corresponding or enquiring? I completely understand my fault and although I think the app can be misleading (still not sure why an E-railcard can work and show no indication when planning travel that it is invalid or expired).
I want to take full responsibility as the owner of the railcard for not fully understanding this process and therefore committing this offence. Also having the railcard invalid for 4 months even I can understand will be very difficult for an officer to sympathise - especially for my ‘young, male, student’ demographic that I’ve learnt are often prime intentional offenders.
I’d just like some advice if any of you would be so kind about how I can settle this out of court, as a criminal offence as a student is a very scary prospect - and for such a human and genuine mistake!
I’m having a lot of stress about a large settlement fee in excess of £500 (which I’m honestly not sure I can even afford to pay as a student in London), and even worse a criminal conviction of an entirely unintentional mistake.
Hope to hear from you all soon, thank you for taking your time to read through.
Jack