Scottish Daily Mail

Crooks cloned my number plate and left me on the hook for £312 of charges

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Dear Sally

I HAVE a van I use for my small children’s entertainm­ent business, which I drive a couple of times a month.

As I live in the Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) area in London, I have to pay £12.50 every time I use the vehicle.

For this reason, I set up an autopay arrangemen­t, so I don’t forget.

When I checked my statement recently, I was astounded to see a total of £362.50 had been deducted from my account.

I am certain someone has cloned my registrati­on plates. I have a smart doorbell, and photograph­ic evidence to show my vehicle is outside my house — even at exact times the cloned vehicle was photograph­ed.

The photos of the vehicle that Transport for London have sent me show a similar vehicle but it has distinguis­hing features, including a red sticker on the rear driver’s door and indentatio­ns on the rear passenger door.

I have submitted all this evidence to TfL to dispute the charges but just get a generic response saying ‘not enough evidence’.

I am at my wits’ end. This is taking up so much of my time, but the bill is ringing up every day.

N. B., London.

IT’s certainly not been child’s play trying to unravel the charges racked up by a crook posing as you in a similar motor.

You’d been driven round the bend by Tfl, which kept rejecting your evidence, even though this included photos taken by its own cameras revealing the imposter driver, who is white, stocky and male. You told me you are asian, short and female. It would be funny if it wasn’t such a serious issue. I’m sorry to say you are not alone. The numbers of car copycats are accelerati­ng as criminals seek to avoid charges and fill up with fuel without paying, using disguised motors to throw the authoritie­s off the scent.

The cheats tend to either steal genuine plates or order copies online from unauthoris­ed suppliers and attach them to the same model and colour of car. They then merrily drive around and park where they want without fear of penalties — unless in the rare event police catch them in the act.

This leaves innocent drivers such as you wasting time and energy battling to appeal fees and penalties or trying to clear their name.

I stepped in and asked Tfl to investigat­e your case. a few days later, you were contacted by the organisati­on directly and told that it now accepts your vehicle has been cloned. hurrah!

It also rang me to say your disputed charges will be refunded. I estimate this will be at least £312, but it was unable to immediatel­y confirm the sum.

anyone in the same predicamen­t should always report incidents to the police and log the issued reference number with the DVla.

Drivers should take photos of their car so that difference­s can be compared to copycat vehicles.

It is important not to pay erroneous charges and to contact the issuing authoritie­s straight away.

simon Williams, at motoring company raC, says car cloning is a modern-day menace and fears it will only get worse because the UleZ area is expanding.

he says: ‘This will mean cameras will no doubt detect more number plates of non-compliant cloned vehicles. and, with new clean air zones appearing in other cities around england even more drivers are likely to get the unpleasant surprise of discoverin­g their number plate is being used illegally on another vehicle.’

LAST December, I spent £160 on two Time Together vouchers from website Buyagift as Christmas presents for my husband and my son and his wife.

We have tried to redeem them on more than ten experience­s but without success because there was no availabili­ty.

Some of the following reasons were given: ‘This experience is no longer available’ (despite being listed in the scheme booklet) and ‘the restaurant has had a fire and is closed’.

Three hotels said they would accept them but not until after December this year. The most recent one we tried explained that demand was so high postCovid that she had enough bookings from full-price customers. Where does this leave us?

I’ve tried contacting Buyagift but to no avail. There is no contact telephone number or email address. There is just a chat line which keeps logging off.

S. C., Lincoln.

VOUCHERS make the ideal gift for that ‘hard to buy for’ person or where the recipient needs to decide the date of a trip or outing. You chose the Time Together option so you and your husband could enjoy a hotel experience with your son and daughter-in-law at a time and place of your choice from the menu on offer in the booklet.

It’s not surprising you had a sense of humour failure after repeated attempts to book.

Online complaints service resolver says it has been flooded with complaints about these kinds of voucher schemes, with nearly 2,000 in the first quarter of 2022.

Consumer expert Martyn James, says: ‘Complaints tend to be not being able to redeem the vouchers or get refunds from them — and issues about the restrictio­ns with the deals themselves.’

Fortunatel­y, I managed to get hold of a helpful Buyagift employee who tracked down a colleague who could investigat­e your complaint.

a day later the firm responded. The post-Covid booking bounce appears to have piled on the pressure. The Buyagift spokesman explains: ‘Due to the demand after the pandemic and customers now using their vouchers, we do have a surge in booking activity with a backlog of unused vouchers all trying to book in an experience.

‘We are working with our suppliers to arrange more availabili­ty for our customers.’

he confirmed that some of the booklets included in the boxes sent to buyers contained out-of-date informatio­n about the partners involved, and said this was being rectified by directing customers online for more accurate lists.

You have now been refunded and as a goodwill gesture have been given £100 of vouchers to spend on a future booking.

■ WRITE to Sally Hamilton at Sally Sorts It, Money Mail, 20 Waterloo Street, Glasgow G2 6DB or email sally@ dailymail.co.uk — include phone number, address and a note addressed to the offending organisati­on giving them permission to talk to Sally Hamilton. Please do not send original documents as we cannot take responsibi­lity for them. No legal responsibi­lity can be accepted by the Daily Mail for answers given.

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