Skip to content or view screen version

TV Licence Enforcment - An Open Letter to the BBC

Cornucopia | 19.09.2012 10:10 | Policing | Social Struggles | Technology

As a consequence of the BBC's failure to address the many shortcomings of its TV Licence enforcement operation, we have taken the unusual step of issuing an Open Letter regarding our concerns to the BBC Executive, with copies to MPs and the Press.

The BBC's antipathy towards legitimately unlicensed people is well established. What is less well known is the flimsy legal basis upon which it exists, the full extent of their presumed authority to intimidate people, and the level of resistance that is building to the sordid secret behind the sequins.

Various attempts have been made to raise these issues with the BBC and BBC Trust in a calm, considered way, and yet the harassment of innocent unlicensed people goes on.

The harassment consists of a monthly letter (Threat-o-gram) that seeks to misrepresent BBC/TVL, its legal status (none), its powers (few) and its relationship with the public (poor). These letters continue indefinitely whilst people continue to exercise their legal right not to deal with BBC/TVL. In some cases the tone of the letters can only be described as insulting and hysterical.

BBC/TVL then seeks to gain entry to properties to search for illicit TVs. They have no legal power of entry and rely upon subterfuge to trick to the unwary into both allowing access and confessing to the offence (often where no offence has been committed).

The Open Letter addresses these issues in legal detail. Broadly the concerns are:-

- Is harassment and misinformation a legitimate enforcement tool?
- Is there an implicit duty on public authorities to inform citizens of their rights, rather than obfuscate them?
- Should an authority with no powers of entry fabricate them from common law and subterfuge?
- Is enough being done to prevent the offensive and sometimes criminal behaviour of BBC/TVL staff?
- Is letting off half the offenders caught in the public interest?
- Are the prosecutions of remaining offenders in the public interest?
- Are the rights of offenders being respected?
- Is the automaton prosecution process capable of addressing the relevant issues of law?

Cornucopia
- e-mail: mark@licencefree.co.uk
- Homepage: tvlicenceresistance.info

Comments

Hide 1 hidden comment or hide all comments

Television is for morons.

19.09.2012 10:21

I am one of the people who are being harassed by the whores of the BBC for not having a television license. Every month I receive a letter which threatens all sorts of dire consequences for not possessing a TV license.

They must be committing criminal offences, harassment, demanding money with menaces, duress and more. This letter comes through every month and has done so now for over two years. The threats are unlawful, they go so far as to say they are going to take legal action and I will end up in court to pay a fine. This is the type of fascist attitude that prevails. I am not committing any offence and if they do attmept to use "dirty tricks" then they will pay.

I do not have a television and have not done so for a long time. This is something that seems to be not permitted these days. I am supposed to subject myself to the mind control that operates in the world of UK television.

It appears to me that people in the UK are not allowed to think for themselves, or to be able to live without television. Well I have news for you, we can and d

Mind of my own.


True, but...

19.09.2012 10:49

I've been receiving these threatening letters on a regular basis since the early part of 2007 (all of them not responded to, but kept for evidence), as I wrote to them in late 2006 to tell them that I no longer had a TV, nor used any equipment (e.g., PC) to watch programmes as they are being broadcast), and the OP is right in just about every particular...

...However...

...I'd be slightly wary of supporting the organisation whose website is linked in the post. There is nowhere on there (as far as I can see, at least) which tells you who the people behind it are. Given some of the material on there, there is every possibility that its campaigns are not necessarily what anyone of progressive tendencies could support.

Given that a similar campaign some years ago was orchestrated by an extreme right-wing columnist from the corporate press, a former Russian psychiatric hospital inmate and Norris McWhirter, a degree of caution may be advisable.

TheJudge


Hidden Comment

This posting has been hidden because it breaches the Indymedia UK (IMC UK) Editorial Guidelines.

IMC UK is an interactive site offering inclusive participation. All postings to the open publishing newswire are the responsibility of the individual authors and not of IMC UK. Although IMC UK volunteers attempt to ensure accuracy of the newswire, they take no responsibility legal or otherwise for the contents of the open publishing site. Mention of external web sites or services is for information purposes only and constitutes neither an endorsement nor a recommendation.

Just let them know you don't have a TV

19.09.2012 11:29

The reason they keep writing to you is because you do not respond, the system is fully automated.
I gave away my TV about four years ago when I returned to the UK after working in Africa. I wrote to TV Licencing, they replied about a week later and apart from one home visit that took 10 minutes that was it. In a society where about 97% of the population has a TV it is hardly surprising they assume that somebody who doesn't pay and doesn't respond to their letters gets chased. A little politeness and common sense goes a long way in life.

Jack


knock knock...who der knawkin at ma daw?

19.09.2012 16:14

My sister went to prison for a week because she hadn't paid for the TV licence. Must have been in early 90's I suppose.

Says it all, if you don't pay for your bad quality entertainment and especially for bad quality BBC News then you go to prison. I mean fuck, what kind of society are we living in when the TV stations have the power to send you to prison?

In the years to come she will be able to recount her story and people will sit with their mouths agape in disbelief.

To the comments above, keep those demands and file them away somewhere safe because you just might well find they will become historically significant in the future.

I would kind of like to believe in a chocolate box world of roses and bunnies that a publically funded broadcaster is a good thing...but then the war started and I was astonished to find that the journalists and TV anchors were pretty much holding their own guns.

Never again.

Da Jury.


Argh not this again

19.09.2012 20:29

I don't own a television and haven't for about 20 years now - it's a waste of life and full of lies.

I bought my house back in 2003 and wrote to the TV licensing people to tell them that I do not have a television or tuner device of any kind. I got a relatively nice reply which said "ok but tell us if you get one". Fair enough. Nothing happened at all until 2006.

Some absolute moron dobbed me in for "not having a license" after I was "seen watching television" in my house. I was probably watching a rental DVD on my desktop PC. They were obviously stupid enough to think it was a television. It is well known amongst my neighbours that I don't own a television but that obviously wasn't good enough for one of them.

Cue letters, legal threats etc for the best part of 6 months getting gradually worse. On month 5, a rather weedy individual who refused to identify himself was "picked up and involuntarily carried" from the property one evening after attempting to place a foot in my door and "inspect my utilities". The police as usual were not interested and sent me a sorry letter the following week.

Then it stopped. Nothing since Jan 2007. I'd love a day in court.

Bunch of asshats.

KermitTheFrog


Ignore, ignore, ignore...

19.09.2012 23:16

I've not had a telly for seven years now, but it hasn't stopped the retards from TVL bombarding me (well, 'The Occupier' anyway) with letters and visits on a regular basis throughout that period. I simply shred the letters and put them in the compost bin. Their inspectors are yet to even obtain my name, in fact the only exchange I will enter into with them goes like this:

"Do you have a warrant?"
"No"
"Fuck off then"
(door closes)

One day they'll get the message.

Telly Sucks


Tricksters.

20.09.2012 02:13

"Some absolute moron dobbed me in for "not having a license" after I was "seen watching television" in my house. I was probably watching a rental DVD on my desktop PC. They were obviously stupid enough to think it was a television. It is well known amongst my neighbours that I don't own a television but that obviously wasn't good enough for one of them."

No-one dobbed you in. Thats a standard tactic the TV licencing goons use to get you back into the system.

They do this because the collection agency has to show that they are chasing a minimum number of people every financial quarter. If the figure falls below their set target, they send out letters claiming you were reported. They then let your sense of suspicion do the rest.

Its one of the great freebies collection agencies get to use to shuffle people into their 'system'.

They don't give a shit if you believe it or not. Just as long as you're in the system they don't care.

If you ever get a letter claiming you have been reported, keep it and file a return statement that you demand any and all information regarding all data they keep on file about you under the Data Protection Act. If Mr or Mrs Dobbed-you-in doesn't show up in that record then by law the don't exist and cannot be presented in court.

Then tell then to take a long walk off a short pier.

A


Hide 1 hidden comment or hide all comments