I understand that other councils did the same. My suggestion is that if you receive a bailiff’s letter in these circumstances and dispute the charge, write immediately to the council saying:-
1) You disagree with the charge;
2) Ask them for proof of the issue of the alleged parking ticket;
3) Send your response by email to the council and send a copy to the bailiffs.
The worrying aspect of the case in question is that the bailiff’s letter refers to people as having committed an offence. Now, under decriminalised parking law, parking tickets issued are not issued in relation to an offence – which are criminal matters – but alleged contraventions which are non-criminal. So in itself the letter that has been sent out on behalf of Kensington & Chelsea in my view is completely inaccurate and has no worth or validity. Remember you can fight back against illegally issued parking tickets.
If you want to appealsuch a parking ticket but don't know how - then
visit http://www.appealnow.com
where you can appeal online in 4½ minutes.
© 2006 Barrie Segal and AppealNow.com™ - All Rights reserved
Barrie Segal is the founder of AppealNow.com™ and is a regular radio broadcaster in the UK.
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