Nottingham Post

Driver faked delivery notes in bid to get out of parking fines

HE CHALLENGED TICKETS BY CLAIMING HE WAS UNLOADING FOR COMPANY THAT DIDN’T EXIST

- By SAM MOORHOUSE sam.moorhouse@reachplc.com @Moorhouse1­1

A NOTTINGHAM­SHIRE driver has been ordered to pay more than £2,000 after he parked illegally and lied that he was making deliveries.

James Barford, of Bluebell Avenue, Cotgrave, has been told he must pay £2,200 in fines, costs and compensati­on after producing fake delivery notes and invoices in a bid to avoid 11 fines.

Magistrate­s were told the 34-year-old had collected charges for parking illegally in a loading bay and a residents’ parking zone in Leicester near to his place of work.

In response to the fines, six delivery notes were faked to challenge them, along with a further five, after he was caught parking in permit-only residentia­l areas on the outskirts of the city centre.

An investigat­ion by Leicester City Council found that Barford had claimed to be making deliveries for business and customers on behalf of a company called JB Designs Ltd – a business which is not registered with Companies House.

Barford had also claimed to be working for Pivotal Retail Marketing on another delivery note, but the deliveries were nothing to do with them.

It was also heard that Barford had initially denied some of the allegation­s but, during an interview in March this year, he admitted to fabricatin­g the delivery notes to avoid being fined.

He suggested that he had acted in this way because he was facing financial difficulti­es.

Barford pleaded guilty to 11 charges under the Fraud Act for making the false documents.

He was fined £846 for fabricatin­g the delivery notes, and charged a further £677 in costs, £630 in compensati­on and also ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £85, totalling £2,200.

The 11 parking fines would have cost Barford just £35 each if he had paid them within 14 days of being issued. In total, the cost would have been £385.

Leicester deputy city mayor with responsibi­lity for regulatory services, Councillor Piara Singh Clair, said: “The defendant was repeatedly parking illegally in areas close to his work – and when he was caught out, he faked documents to make it look like he was making deliveries.

“Not only was he trying to avoid paying for parking, but also providing fake invoices to try to dodge paying the parking fines he’d incurred. That is quite simply fraud.

“Offences under the Fraud Act are very serious offences with the potential outcome of a prison sentence.

“The defendant has now had to pay far more money than the fines themselves in the costs, fines and compensati­on resulting from this successful prosecutio­n.”

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