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This blog is to highlight the unjust persecution of legitimate non-TV users at the hands of TV Licensing. These people do not require a licence and are entitled to live without the unnecessary stress and inconvenience caused by TV Licensing's correspondence and employees.

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Friday 19 August 2016

The BBC Justifies TV Licensing's Claimed 99 Percent Conviction Rate


The BBC has explained the methodology behind TV Licensing's claimed "99 percent conviction rate".

You might recall that we have some reservations about the 99 percent claim when we know, as a matter of fact, that only about half the people TV Licensing accuse of evading the TV licence fee are actually convicted by the court.

BBC Freedom of Information Advisor Rupinder Panesar has just provided the following figures and justification for TV Licensing's impressive conviction rate:

Figures for England, Wales and Northern Ireland (although he forgot to give the timeframe):
Cases heard: 193,678
Cases withdrawn: 26,126
Found not guilty: 32
Convictions: 167,520

Mr Panesar goes on to explain: "Of the cases heard, only 32 defendants were found not guilty and therefore the 99% conviction rate is derived by comparing the number of cases heard minus the number of cases withdrawn and comparing this to the number of convictions."

We see.

Here's an equally valid interpretation of the data: 193,678 people turned up to court thinking they were about to stand toe-to-toe with TV Licensing, but only 167,552 of them actually did. TV Licensing said to the other 26,126 <irony>"we're really sorry for inflicting months of stress on you and dragging you miles to court today, but we've decided we're not going to prosecute after all".</irony> Of the 167,552 that actually ended up in the dock, all but 32 of those were convicted of TV licence evasion.

Alternatively, 99% of the 87% of cases TV Licensing followed-through at court resulted in a conviction.

We think that's a more genuine representation of TV Licensing's statistics - not that genuinity is of much concern to TV Licensing.

The 26,126 withdrawn cases are of great interest to us. As Mr Panesar suggests, a significant proportion of those are what TV Licensing would consider first time "evaders". As we've previously mentioned, TV Licensing has a policy whereby it will normally give an alleged first time evader a chance to avoid prosecution if they buy a TV licence and keep up with the payments. However, in our opinion a significant proportion of the withdrawn cases are speculative prosecutions that TV Licensing has decided to quietly kill before exposing to judicial scrutiny.

Speculative prosecution is described on our Glossary page thus: "The fairly regular situation where the TV Licensing Needlecraft Division (Prosecution Team) has a person summoned to court on the basis of often inadequate (occasionally non-existent) evidence, on the assumption that most of them won't respond or contest the charges."

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1 comment:

Fred Bear said...

I wonder if BBC/Capita ever contest cases if the defendant turns up in court intending to plead non-guilty? As I understand it Capita Court Presenters rely on people pleading guilty or not attending court.

According to the SRP Field Monthly Pack, Capita spent 577 hours in the year to end of March 2015 presenting cases and 2,637 hours giving evidence. This doesn't appear to be much time for the roughly 200,000 cases heard (of which 27,000 cases withdrawn). It would appear that they have to get through over 50 cases per hour! I bet they are not too keen on any contested cases.