
EXCLUSIVE Moment fare dodger finds out he owes TfL more than £3,500 after swerving fares for over a year using a 'card his friend gave him'
This is the moment a fare dodger was told he owes more than £3,500 in unpaid ticket costs after avoiding charges for over a year while using a 'card his friend gave him'.
The man had been using the bank card for over a year - despite having no money on it - when he was caught by TfL investigators at Surrey Quays station in London 's docklands.
While the card had been accepted by the ticket reader each time, it had later resulted in a payment failure.
This meant he was able to force the exit gates to open at a station without having to pay the TfL travel charge, racking up thousands of unpaid fees.
The unsuspecting man was snared on his way to work, with investigators able to trace his usual journey and identify him on CCTV.
After being taken in for an interview, the man claims he 'found' the card, before changing his mind and saying it was given to him by a friend.
But this does little to convince the officers, as they reveal he owes TfL an eye-watering £3,573 from more than 500 journeys taken in over a year.
The elaborate sting was captured in the latest episode of Channel 5 documentary 'Fare Dodgers: At War with the Law'.
The investigators tell the fare-dodger he had been using the bank card for over a year - despite having no money on it
The unsuspecting man was snared on his way to work, with investigators able to trace his usual journey and identify him on CCTV
TfL investigator Lisa and her colleague spotted the man just as he was exiting the barriers at Surrey Quays train station.
She asks the man to show her the card he used to tap out before asking where he got it. The man replies: 'No it's not mine, I found it.'
'Oh that's a whole different ball game now,' Lisa adds.
She then checks the card on her own scanner, which confirms her suspicions that the card is faulty.
'You see there it's failed? So me and you need to have a conversation. So I am going to ask you in for an interview.'
The fare dodger then asks: 'Is it going to take a long time? I'm working,' to which Lisa replies: 'It's going to take as long as it takes.'
As she begins interviewing the man, Lisa tells him an investigation into the card shows that he had been using it illegally.
'At this point because of this card I do believe you have committed an offence, so at this point I am going to caution.'
Lisa continues questioning the man, asking where he got the card. He tells her it was given to him by a friend
'When you have been travelling to Surrey Quays everyday to go to work, do you know that you were not paying TfL for your travel?'
The man replies: 'My friend told me you can use this card for travelling.'
He goes on to admit that, after being shown evidence of his fare dodging, he has not paid his full fare for that morning's journey.
However, this is not the first time he has used the card and the total amount he owes seems to much larger than he initially thought.
'The next bit I am about to show you might be a bit of a shock,' Lisa tells the man.
'All of those journeys do add up to quite a bit.'
She reveals the man has racked up £3,573 in unpaid TfL charges, which seems to hit him with a sense of disbelief.
'You have had that card for over a year and they have never been paid,' Lisa adds.
Taken about by the amount, the fare dodger apologises for his actions.
'I'm so sorry about this one. My friend gave me this card.'
He goes on to sign a document admitting to dodging fares on more than 500 journeys.
This means his case will now be passed on to the TfL prosecution team, who will decide the next steps.
The man continues to apologise and tells Lisa he will now buy his own TfL card.
'I don't think I can see this guy reoffending again. I think he was quite surprised by the amount it had risen to and I think he has learnt his lesson. Fingers crossed.'
The second episode of the new series of Fare Dodgers last week saw a rail fare dodger finally caught by investigators after evading nearly £20,000 in ticket costs in one of Britain's biggest ever cases of its kind.
The offender had been paying for only a small part of his full journey from Surrey to London Waterloo, when he bought an e-ticket only from Vauxhall to Waterloo.
While this made his ticket much cheaper, the passenger was also using a 16-17 Saver Railcard he is not entitled to for a half-price discount which further reduced the price.
A South Western Railway revenue protection team identified him through CCTV and then eventually caught him in the act at Waterloo station to pursue a prosecution, after finding he had been evading an average of £35 each day going back to 2022.
Hashtags

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


Powys County Times
5 minutes ago
- Powys County Times
SNP calls on Labour to match Scottish Government action on poverty
Almost two million families would be lifted out of poverty if Labour matched Scottish Government action on the issue, the SNP has claimed. Ahead of the UK spending review, the SNP asked the House of Commons Library to produce an independent analysis on the number of British children in poverty and the impact that replicating Scottish Government policies across the UK would have. The research showed 1.83 million families would be lifted out of poverty if policies were matched, including abolishing the two-child benefit cap, scrapping the bedroom tax and raising the child element of Universal Credit to match the Scottish child payment, according to the SNP. Statistics showed a third of British children were anticipated to be living in poverty by 2029-30 unless action was taken. Sir Keir Starmer was urged to act on the figures ahead of the UK spending review on Wednesday amid warnings the number of British children living in poverty is expected to rise to a record 4.6 million by 2029-30. Over the past decade, the number of children living in poverty has risen from 3.7 million (27%) in 2013/14 to 4.5 million (31%) in 2023/24, the SNP said. The SNP said Scotland is the only part of the UK where child poverty is falling, due to 'bold' policies such as the Scottish child payment of £27.15 per child, per week, paid in addition to other benefits. Replicating it UK-wide, by raising the child element of Universal Credit by the same amount, would lift 732,000 families out of poverty, including a further 38,000 families in Scotland, analysis showed. The SNP said it has also mitigated the bedroom tax and is in the process of ending the two-child benefit cap in Scotland. It said replicating the policies would lift a further 609,000 British families out of poverty, with the combined impact of introducing all three policies lifting 1.83 million families out of poverty, including a further 75,000 in Scotland. The UK Government delayed its child poverty taskforce review to the autumn and last year Labour MPs voted against abolishing the two-child benefit cap, in a motion tabled by the SNP. The Chancellor has previously rejected proposals to abolish the bedroom tax. The SNP said the UK Government's own impact analysis showed planned cuts to disability benefits will push 250,000 more people into poverty, including 50,000 children, with families losing out on £4,500 a year on average as a result of the cuts, branding it 'shameful'. SNP work and pensions spokeswoman Kirsty Blackman MP said: 'The evidence shows Keir Starmer's Labour Government is keeping almost two million families in poverty by failing to match SNP action across the UK. 'It's shameful that UK child poverty is rising to record levels under the Labour Government, which has pushed thousands more children into deprivation by imposing punitive welfare cuts. 'It's vital that the Prime Minister finally listens to families struggling with the soaring cost of living – and takes the long-overdue action needed to end child poverty at the UK spending review this week. 'That means abandoning the devastating austerity cuts to disabled families, matching the Scottish child payment UK-wide, abolishing the bedroom tax and scrapping the two-child limit and benefit cap. 'With 4.5 million children living in poverty in the UK, only bold and immediate action will do. 'The two-child benefit cap and bedroom tax must be abolished immediately, but that alone isn't enough to end child poverty. It's vital the Labour Government matches the Scottish child payment by raising the child element of Universal Credit across the UK. 'Scotland is the only part of the UK where child poverty is falling – and families receive the best cost-of-living help of anywhere in the UK. 'Westminster must match this action – or it will leave millions more children languishing in poverty.' A UK Government spokesperson said: 'We are determined to bring down child poverty and we have already expanded free breakfast clubs, increased the national minimum wage for those on the lowest incomes, uprated benefits in April and supported 700,000 of the poorest families by introducing a fair repayment rate on universal credit deductions. 'We will also publish an ambitious child poverty strategy later this year to ensure we deliver fully funded measures that tackle the structural and root causes of child poverty across the country.'


The Herald Scotland
30 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
How the UK spending reviews will shape Scotland's finances
The UK Government has already trailed plans to increase defence spending, boost spending in the NHS, and reform social security. But it has said much less, so far, about day-to-day spending on public services. With limited headroom for new funding, any shift in priorities is likely to mean savings elsewhere. Read more: Spending decisions on reserved areas such as the industrial strategy, research and development, and defence procurement will all have an impact here in Scotland. But the Scottish Government's budget will also be impacted too. Even with recent tax devolution, the Barnett Formula remains the most significant contributor to the Scottish Government's budget. The formula ensures that any increase or decrease in Whitehall spending in devolved areas – for example, health or education – triggers a population-based adjustment to Scotland's budget. That means that what is announced in the spending review will not just matter for Whitehall departments, it will directly shape the financial envelope available to Holyrood. The onus then falls on the Scottish Government to set out its own spending priorities. June's medium-term financial strategy will likely give a high-level overview, but for greater detail we will need to wait for our the spending review in Scotland. The Cabinet Secretary for Finance has indicated that a timeline for that review will be published in June. The interaction between UK and Scottish Government fiscal policies does not stop with the Barnett Formula. Just last month, we were reminded of further – often subtle – interactions between developments in the UK and the Scottish budget. Read more: In publishing our updated five-year outlook at the Scottish Fiscal Commission, we highlighted how further fiscal pressures had emerged since the turn of the year. One such factor was the latest information on the Scottish Government's devolved tax and social security data, relative to the rest of the UK. Under Scotland's fiscal framework, the Scottish budget does not always benefit when its tax revenues rise. What matters is whether those revenues are growing faster than their counterparts in the rest of the UK. This is due to a core principle in the fiscal framework that seeks to protect the Scottish budget from shared UK-wide economic risks. But, on the other hand, this means that any divergence in performance between Scotland and the rest of the UK – the so-called net tax position – has a direct consequence on the level of funding available. In recent times, we have seen an improving performance – and outlook – for revenues in the rest of the UK that is not being fully matched in the data for Scotland, leading to knock-on implications for Scotland's budget. This is one of the lesser-known intricacies of our devolved fiscal setup: stronger tax growth in England can mean less money for Holyrood than planned, even if Scotland's own outlook is unchanged. Read more: A similar issue arises in social security. As more benefits are devolved – including disability and carer payments – what matters is not just how much is spent, but how that compares to the funding received. Scottish Ministers have made deliberate policy choices to expand eligibility and increase support, particularly in areas linked to child poverty and disability. Those choices have widened the gap between spending and funding. But the latest forecasts show that planned UK Government reforms to reduce spending in England and Wales – especially through tighter eligibility for benefits related to disability and ill-health – might make that gap larger by lowering the equivalent funding to Scotland. By 2029–30, we project that annual spending on devolved social security will exceed funding by £2 billion. Holyrood may have greater control over tax and spend decisions than in the past, but the budget remains integrated with decisions made in Westminster. Any meaningful strategy for Scotland's public finances – including in future spending reviews – must start with a clear understanding of that interdependence. Graeme Roy is professor of economics at the University of Glasgow's Adam Smith Business School.


Daily Record
33 minutes ago
- Daily Record
SNP calls on Labour to match Scottish Government action on poverty
The number of children living in poverty has risen to 4.5 million over the last decade. Almost two million families would be lifted out of poverty if Labour matched Scottish Government action on the issue, the SNP has claimed. Ahead of the UK spending review, the SNP asked the House of Commons Library to produce an independent analysis on the number of British children in poverty and the impact that replicating Scottish Government policies across the UK would have. The research showed 1.83 million families would be lifted out of poverty if policies were matched, including abolishing the two-child benefit cap, scrapping the bedroom tax and raising the child element of Universal Credit to match the Scottish child payment, according to the SNP. Statistics showed a third of British children were anticipated to be living in poverty by 2029-30 unless action was taken. Keir Starmer was urged to act on the figures ahead of the UK spending review on Wednesday amid warnings the number of British children living in poverty is expected to rise to a record 4.6 million by 2029-30. Over the past decade, the number of children living in poverty has risen from 3.7 million (27%) in 2013/14 to 4.5 million (31%) in 2023/24, the SNP said. The SNP said Scotland is the only part of the UK where child poverty is falling, due to 'bold' policies such as the Scottish child payment of £27.15 per child, per week, paid in addition to other benefits. Replicating it UK-wide, by raising the child element of Universal Credit by the same amount, would lift 732,000 families out of poverty, including a further 38,000 families in Scotland, analysis showed. The SNP said it has also mitigated the bedroom tax and is in the process of ending the two-child benefit cap in Scotland. It said replicating the policies would lift a further 609,000 British families out of poverty, with the combined impact of introducing all three policies lifting 1.83 million families out of poverty, including a further 75,000 in Scotland. The UK Government delayed its child poverty taskforce review to the autumn and last year Labour MPs voted against abolishing the two-child benefit cap, in a motion tabled by the SNP. The Chancellor has previously rejected proposals to abolish the bedroom tax. The SNP said the UK Government's own impact analysis showed planned cuts to disability benefits will push 250,000 more people into poverty, including 50,000 children, with families losing out on £4,500 a year on average as a result of the cuts, branding it 'shameful'. SNP work and pensions spokeswoman Kirsty Blackman MP said: 'The evidence shows Keir Starmer's Labour Government is keeping almost two million families in poverty by failing to match SNP action across the UK. 'It's shameful that UK child poverty is rising to record levels under the Labour Government, which has pushed thousands more children into deprivation by imposing punitive welfare cuts. 'It's vital that the Prime Minister finally listens to families struggling with the soaring cost of living – and takes the long-overdue action needed to end child poverty at the UK spending review this week. 'That means abandoning the devastating austerity cuts to disabled families, matching the Scottish child payment UK-wide, abolishing the bedroom tax and scrapping the two-child limit and benefit cap. 'With 4.5 million children living in poverty in the UK, only bold and immediate action will do. 'The two-child benefit cap and bedroom tax must be abolished immediately, but that alone isn't enough to end child poverty. It's vital the Labour Government matches the Scottish child payment by raising the child element of Universal Credit across the UK. 'Scotland is the only part of the UK where child poverty is falling – and families receive the best cost-of-living help of anywhere in the UK. 'Westminster must match this action – or it will leave millions more children languishing in poverty.' A UK Government spokesperson said: 'We are determined to bring down child poverty and we have already expanded free breakfast clubs, increased the national minimum wage for those on the lowest incomes, uprated benefits in April and supported 700,000 of the poorest families by introducing a fair repayment rate on universal credit deductions. 'We will also publish an ambitious child poverty strategy later this year to ensure we deliver fully funded measures that tackle the structural and root causes of child poverty across the country.'