Meet-and-greet users tell of car damage and mystery miles
A woman says she has been left in a "nightmare" with up to £6,500 worth of damage to her car after leaving it with a company offering "secure" parking for airport passengers.
Sophie Rose used Keir Allan's meet-and-greet service at Stansted Airport for her 30th birthday trip, but said on her return she was told her car had been in a "hit-and-run accident" 21 miles (34km) away in Harlow.
The BBC has spoken to other Keir Allan customers whose claims include them returning to vandalised cars, finding hundreds more miles on their odometers and dash cam footage showing a trip to Burger King.
GetAwayEssentials.com Limited - which trades as Keir Allan - told the BBC it did not cause the damage to Mrs Rose's car so were "not liable", and disputed the repair costs.
The firm said it notified Essex police of the accident and provided the force with a witness statement.
On arriving back from Dublin last month, Mrs Rose's car was returned with its "boot up in the air and the bumper completely smashed in".
Her insurers said that, in order to cover the repairs, she needed to claim on Keir Allan's insurance. But Mrs Rose claimed Keir Allan had "refused... and said that it's a police matter".
"I contacted Essex Police and the reference number Keir Allan provided me with doesn't exist," she said.
Mrs Rose, from Felixstowe in Suffolk, thought Keir Allan had "been nothing but rude, disrespectful".
Musa Ahmed, director at Keir Allan, said Mrs Rose had received a much lower repair quote and the matter was now with the civil courts to resolve.
Jamie Andersen and his father-in-law used Keir Allan for parking during a family trip to Fuerteventura from Stansted in April.
On arriving back at Stansted, Mr Andersen said they were sent a post code for the nearby village of Burton End by WhatsApp to collect their vehicles.
Mr Andersen, from Haverhill in Suffolk, said they "had no choice" but to spend £40 on a taxi for seven people "not knowing if our car was there, [or] if someone was there with our key".
The post code was for a yard, where Mr Andersen found a person "very overwhelmed with phone calls and angry customers".
The family was taken to a makeshift "office" - a black Vauxhall Astra which contained hundreds of car keys in folders.
Mr Andersen's key was there but his father-in-law's one was missing.
Mr Andersen said his father-in-law, who was carrying a spare key at the time, had unexpected extra mileage on the clock, his dash cam had been wiped and cables disconnected.
Mr Ahmed strongly denied the allegation that dashcam footage had been deleted.
The BBC has spoken to another customer who said he had had an extra 264 miles (425km) on the clock and a previously full tank of fuel in the red after it was left in the care of Keir Allan.
Mr Andersen's dashcam footage was available and showed the car parked at a Burger King restaurant for more than an hour after he had dropped off his car.
"I just felt like someone had broken into my house and it wasn't a nice feeling," he said. "I know what a meet-and-greet is but you don't expect your car to be driven to a drive-through."
Mr Ahmed said: "We refute any suggestion that customers cars were used for any other purpose than to store and return the cars to the customers."
However, he said that "since at any one time we have over 300 keys of our customers, naturally, due to human error keys do get misplaced".
He said the company reimbursed customers for the cost of any lost keys.
Essex Trading Standards has had 38 airport parking complaints so far this year - compared to six in 2023 and 16 in 2024.
Isaac Occhipinti, from the British Parking Association (BPA), said there were many reputable companies but that issues can "erode trust".
He said the sector had an "inherent vulnerability at its core in that anybody can turn up at an airport car park with a clipboard and a high-visibility jacket and claim to be a meet and greet company".
"We would really strongly recommend don't always go for the cheapest option on the market, he said. "If it's incredibly cheap there may well be a reason for that."
The BPA has tried to introduce accreditation but take up has been poor, said Mr Occhipinti, and he called for further government regulation.
A government spokesman said: "We are aware of concerns about some 'meet and greet' parking companies at airports.
"All privately operated car parks must abide by consumer law, with complaints properly investigated, ensuring fairness and protection for customers."
Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Essex Trading Standards
British Parking Association
'My partner can't cope with child abusers on his prison wing'
Why are people living in the shadow of 'mega-sheds'?
'Car cloning made me dread the morning post'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
2 hours ago
- CBS News
Pedestrian dies after being hit by car overnight in Oak Forest, police say
A pedestrian was killed overnight after being hit by a car in Oak Forest, Illinois. Oak Forest police said officers responded to the crash around 1:46 a.m. near the 150th block of southbound Cicero Avenue. Police and fire crews provided medical assistance to the pedestrian, who was later taken to South Suburban Hospital, where they died. The identity of the victim was not released pending notification of the family. Police said the crash was not a hit-and-run. Investigation into the crash remains ongoing by the Oak Forest Police Department along with the South Suburban Major Accident Reconstruction Team. Anyone with information about the crash is asked to contact Investigator Lowisz by email at dlowisz@


Fox News
3 hours ago
- Fox News
Florida men charged in fatal boating hit-and-run of 15-year-old ballerina
Authorities have filed misdemeanor charges against two Florida men in connection with the boating hit-and-run death of a 15-year-old high school freshman while she was wakeboarding with friends last year. Carlos "Bill" Alonso, 79, is charged with violating two U.S. Coast Guard navigational rules, and Edmund Hartley, 31, is charged with violating four Coast Guard rules, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission (FWC). In May 2024, Ella Adler, 15, and a friend were wakeboarding in Key Biscayne's Nixon Beach, located south of Miami. The girls were being towed by a boat driven by Hartley and carrying a dozen people when they fell into the water in different locations, according to officials. While in the water, Adler was struck by a second boat that subsequently sped off, officials said. Witnesses reported seeing a center console boat with blue bottom paint and multiple outboard engines at the time of the incident. The description led investigators to Alonso's Boston whaler docked outside his Coral Gables home, with Alonso previously telling authorities he was unaware he had struck someone, according to his attorneys. "What happened last year was an absolute tragedy, but it was not Bill's fault," Lauren Krasnoff, the attorney representing Alonso, said in a statement to Fox News Digital. "Bill is an experienced and cautious boater and that is how he acted that day. FWC explicitly told us that they did not find Bill's actions caused the accident. Because of that, we were very surprised to learn about the citations." Adler was a freshman at Ransom Everglades School in Coconut Grove and a Miami City Ballet ballerina, where she performed in more than 100 shows, according to her obituary. "In her 15 years on this earth, she dazzled us with her light," her family wrote. "She emanated love and joy." The 15-year-old ballerina was the granddaughter of Holocaust survivors and was a proud Jewish-American, according to her family. "She loved Israel and came from a long line of Jewish leaders with a strong commitment to faith and tikkun olam," her obituary reads. "She wore her identity proudly and loudly, just like her parents." The attorney representing Hartley did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. "The FWC extends its deepest sympathies to the family and friends of Ella Adler," a spokesperson said in a statement to Fox News Digital. "Our thoughts remain with them as they continue to cope with this unimaginable loss." Both men are charged with multiple counts of careless operation of a vessel and have pleaded not guilty. "My deepest condolences to the Adler family," Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava previously posted to X. "Let's honor her memory by exercising better boat safety, to ensure tragedies like this never happen again. May she rest in peace."
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Woman teacher banned for pupil sex and drugs texts
A woman has been banned from teaching after a panel found she sent messages about her sexual encounters to a pupil and encouraged him to smoke cannabis with her. Charlotte Doman, then 32, was teaching history at William Edwards secondary school in Grays, Essex, when her inappropriate contact began. A Teaching Regulation Agency (TRA) panel was told she sent messages to the pupil where she called him "little duck" and said to him she loved him, but she denied what she said was romantic. Marc Cavey, TRA chief executive, decided she should be banned from teaching indefinitely, subject to a five-year review period. The TRA heard Ms Doman sent dozens of messages to the child, who the panel referred to as Pupil A, between April and May 2023. In one she said: "You're not even legal or an adult or anything. Like, am I taking advantage of you? Some days it feels like you're taking advantage of me lol." In messages seen by the panel, she told him: "YOU have all the control in this relationship." She also told Pupil A details about her sexual relationships, the panel found, saying in an Instagram message: "One night I ended up with three different guys." She was said to have made comments about the pupil's appearance and messaged him, saying: "I literally go get waxed every eight weeks for no-one to appreciate it." The panel also heard Ms Doman encouraged Pupil A and his friends to "pull sickies" on a day she was off school, and at least once invited Pupil A to spend time alone with her. The now 34-year-old did not attend her misconduct hearing, but in written statements said the "little duck" nickname was "not romantic". She said she was letting the pupil "know that someone cared about his existence" in telling him she loved him. Ms Doman admitted she also encouraged Pupil A to drink alcohol and smoke cannabis with her, and said: "I am unsure why any of this occurred. "I certainly don't behave like this myself. I drink alcohol less than once a month and never to excess, and I've never taken drugs." The teacher also admitted she had sent Pupil A messages outside of school hours and acknowledged she told him to "remove all trace" of her from his phone. Ms Doman denied her conduct was sexually motivated and said she saw Pupil A as "like her child", but the panel ruled on the contrary. It said Ms Doman's behaviour had a "seriously damaging" impact on Pupil A, his parents, the school and its wider community, and her conduct "had the potential to influence Pupil A in a harmful way". Ms Doman was facing "difficulties" in her personal life at the time, the hearing was told, but the panel ruled that she "did not show sufficient insight in respect of the impact her conduct had on others". Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.