Geelong Advertiser

COURT: TICKET RESELLER ‘FAILED’

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TENS of thousands of Australian sport, theatre and music fans were likely misled when paying substantia­l booking fees to controvers­ial ticket reseller Viagogo, the consumer watchdog says.

The Swiss-based ticket marketplac­e was found by a judge yesterday to have broken several consumer laws when falsely claiming tickets were about to sell out and masqueradi­ng as an official ticket seller.

Viagogo has long been controvers­ial with entertaine­rs. It was labelled “disgracefu­l and disruptive” by rock band Gang of Youths and “dicks” by comedian Kitty Flanagan in 2018.

It’s also drawn the ire of consumers with 3500 complaints logged with the consumer watchdog, Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission chair Rod Sims said.

“When you’re thinking about just one company, that’s an enormous number,” Mr Sims said. “The percentage of people who bother to complain is very small so I think you could be confident that this behaviour affected tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands.”

Federal Court Justice Stephen Burley found Viagogo failed to clearly state its booking fees between May and June 2017.

In one case, a Victorian psychiatri­c nurse was charged $104.98 in fees when she booked two tickets to comedy theatre show The Book of Mormon. The woman said several warnings that tickets were running out made her feel anxious and that she paid the fees as she was worried she’d lose her tickets.

Other fans were caught out when buying tickets to the Australian Open tennis, Ashes Test cricket matches and Queen concerts.

The ruling must change Viagogo’s behaviour and it should send a message throughout the industry, Mr Sims said.

“If their behaviour doesn’t change sufficient­ly, they’ll be back in court again,” he said.

The ACCC will seek a multi-million-dollar fine when the case returns to court in Sydney later this year.

Viagogo was contacted for comment.

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