Thousands of rail fare convictions set to be quashed

Thousands of rail fare convictions set to be quashed

Getty Images Woman in beige and white striped cardigan, salmon t-shirt and dark blue trousers sitting in a train carriage, looking at mobile phone.Getty Images

As many as 74,000 prosecutions for rail fare evasion in England and Wales are set to be quashed following a landmark ruling.

UK rail companies had been fast-tracking alleged fare evasion offences using a process called the single justice procedure (SJP), which allows magistrates’ hearings to be held behind closed doors.

But on Thursday, the UK’s chief magistrate, Judge Goldspring, declared six test cases as void, which effectively means they should never have happened.

The exact number of similar cases that will need to be quashed is still unclear.

Authorities including the Department for Transport as well as train companies will now have to agree a list of all people whose convictions could be overturned by the end of September.

A hearing later this year will decide which other prosecutions can also be declared void.

Judge Goldspring said he thought four train companies were involved in the process, but was not able to identify them.

However, in a hearing last month both Northern Trains, the government-owned operator, and Greater Anglia apologised for using SJPs.

In a summary of his judgment, Judge Goldspring said: “Parliament did not envisage these offences being prosecuted through the SJP.

“They should never have been brought through that process.”

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