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Cebu_4_2
19th March 2012, 08:13 PM
TV licence cheats make up a TENTH of all magistrate court cases



Women are more often at home when enforcement officers call
More than 3,000 evaders a week hauled before courts


By Paul Revoir (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Paul+Revoir) and Jack Doyle (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Jack+Doyle)
PUBLISHED: 18:24 EST, 19 March 2012 | UPDATED: 18:33 EST, 19 March 2012



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More than 3,000 people a week are being prosecuted for not having a TV licence making up a tenth of all magistrate court cases, it has been revealed.

Spiralling numbers of prosecutions courts deal with more such cases than any other offence.

Two out of three of the defendants are women – thought to be because they are more often at home when enforcement officers call.

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/03/19/article-0-053142BA0000044D-267_468x355.jpg More than 3,000 people a week are being hauled before the courts for not having a TV licence. A man from the TV Licensing department is pictured

Last year 140,000 defendants were convicted and saddled with a criminal record.
The revelations have raised concerns that the fee evaders are being treated with a heavy hand and face tougher penalties than drug users and shoplifters.

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Magistrates called for the offence to be decriminalised so defendants are dealt with outside the courts. Over four years the number of prosecutions for licence fee evasion has soared by more than 20 per cent.
The most recent figures, show nearly 165,000 television set owners were prosecuted over 12 months for not buying the £145.50 licence.
Anyone found guilty of evading the licence fee is given a criminal record and can be fined up to £1,000. If they fail to pay the fine they can be jailed – which has happened in dozens of cases. In contrast, shoplifters, thugs and vandals are routinely given spot fines of £80 and are not saddled with a criminal record.

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/03/19/article-2117389-057ACB33000005DC-611_468x286.jpg Last year 140,000 defendants were convicted and saddled with a criminal record

Similarly, thousands of drugs users who are caught smoking cannabis are given fixed penalties and dodge court action.
Civil liberties groups said fee evaders would find themselves branded as criminals when undergoing a CRB check.
Nick Pickles from Big Brother Watch, said: ‘A criminal conviction carries huge repercussions and it is questionable if a TV licensing offence warrants such a heavy handed approach. A civil alternative would still allow revenue to be recovered without blighting people’s futures with the seriousness of a criminal conviction.’
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/03/19/article-2117389-123E1BBB000005DC-90_233x326.jpg
Figures released by the Ministry of Justice show that in 2010, 164,444 people were prosecuted for evading the licence fee. Of those, 142,375 were convicted and sentenced in the courts.
By contrast, spot fines were given to more than 40,000 for the theft of goods worth up to £200. Vandals causing £500 worth of damage were handed fines for criminal damage on more than 6,700 occasions. Nearly 35,000 were fined for anti-social behaviour.
In 2010 Magistrates’ Courts in England and Wales handled a total of 1,642,548 prosecutions for all types of offences.
Fines raised from the offence have also risen sharply over four years and are up by about 50 per cent. The BBC’s own figures show at least 74 people over the past five years have been put in prison for non-payment.

A spokesman for the Magistrates’ Association said: ‘For almost 20 years we have been calling for changes in the law so that non-payment of TV licences is decriminalised.
‘It had been hoped that perhaps a change might be brought about when the switch from analogue to digital broadcasting was completed but as yet there are no plans for the BBC to move to a subscription.’

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2012/03/19/article-2117389-123E57CB000005DC-166_468x351.jpg
The number of prosecutions has risen in part because many more are struggling to pay.
In 2010, licence fee fines totalled just under £25million a year. In 2007 the total stood at £16.5million. The money raised goes to the Treasury rather than to the BBC. The average fine for is £171.
A separate body, TV Licensing, is contracted by the BBC to administer the system and bring prosecutions. It employs an army of enforcement officers who last year visited more than four million homes.
Last night a TV Licensing spokesman said: ‘On behalf of the majority who pay, we will prosecute evaders. The estimated evasion rate has remained steady, at a low of around five per cent, for the last five years.
‘TV Licence evasion cases may account for one in ten cases, but they take up a very small proportion of court time as few people attend court.’
The Ministry of Justice said: ‘The Government is committed to reform of the criminal justice system to ensure courts respond quickly and efficiently to crime and disorder.

Glass
19th March 2012, 08:48 PM
It's weird because the Poms have always had TV licenses and I don't get it. We don't have them. You can choose to pay for TV if you want. Rupert would prefer you didn't have a choice but tuff titties to him.

ok so it seems it is to fund the BBC. Interesting. I think the Australian BC and the Canadian BC are funded through consolidated revenues. ie. income taxes.

I remember that the UK also had lots of pirate radio stations. I know of a few people who used to operate them. The deal was they went outside the 12mile limit and then would broadcast radio. Alternatively they just ran them as underground operations. I know in Australia the rules about transmitting radio programs is pretty grey. I think you can do it on the FM band if your power output is less than 5W. Would the PTB get antsy about it? Probably.

I want to know the science behind the detection gear. How do they know you are watching TV? Are they eavesdropping for audio?

MNeagle
19th March 2012, 08:53 PM
no Glass, it does not fund the BBC:


The money raised goes to the Treasury rather than to the BBC. The average fine for is £171.


There is their money-maker/motivation.

Agreed about the detection gear!

Cebu_4_2
19th March 2012, 08:53 PM
Thanks Glass, I have never heard of this before. I'll send a message to a friend for his rendition of the license.

Glass
19th March 2012, 09:32 PM
no Glass, it does not fund the BBC:



There is their money-maker/motivation.

Agreed about the detection gear!


Thanks for that. I saw this and assumed. Not safe to assume.


‘It had been hoped that perhaps a change might be brought about when the switch from analogue to digital broadcasting was completed but as yet there are no plans for the BBC to move to a subscription.’

So perhaps the BBC is charged with the task to collect the TV licensure fee?

ArgenteumTelum
20th March 2012, 04:03 AM
UK website:

http://www.tvlicensing.co.uk/

Cebu_4_2
20th March 2012, 04:10 AM
Answer:

We have 2 types of tv in the uk. Public funded and private funded. The publuc funded carries no adverts and are mainly the BBC channels. They also broadcast radio channels as well. By law you have to purchase a tv license to fund this, even if you don't watch BBC channels. The private funded channels rely on advertising revenue. We also have satellite (sky) and cable (virgin media) which you have to pay for. We have sky at home giving us over 700 channels of crap to view. We pay for this along with the tv license.

brosil
20th March 2012, 06:26 AM
Mobile detection systems were in use in the 1950s. At that time they would pick up the rf off the tuner to tell what channel you were watching. In the U.S., it was used to generate ratings information for advertising.