TV Licencing Search Warrants
Dear British Broadcasting Corporation,
If the BBC suspect a householder us watching tv without a licence and then obtain a search warrant to enter a that persons property. On entering that property how can proof be obtained that they are watching live tv without a licence if...
A: The TV is turned off.
Or
B: The TV is turned on and the occupier is watching a film on catchup TV but not on any bbc channels.
Also
C: If an occupier is watching catchup tv (not bbc chanels) and their cat or dog accidentaly stands on the remote control and switches channels to the bbc for a few seconds. Does that occupier then require a tv licence?
Yours faithfully,
Tyrone Armatage
Mr Hillas left an annotation ()
"Unless they actually catch a person red-handed in the act of receiving TV programmes, there are several valid defences that could be offered. You might find this article of use: "
Abuse of search warrants by BBC TV Licensing contractor Capita has become little more than an exercise in wanton extra-judicial aggression against otherwise decent and law-abiding people in the UK who know when they should be licensed and when not.
That article of use you link to about the Rudd Defence is in essence about the partial judicial nullification of the BBC TV licence fee enforcement regime and it merely shows that recourse to search warrants by BBC TV Licensing contractor Capita is an exercise in futility in that it can never prove "beyond reasonable doubt" that the reason for the search warrant (watching live TV programmes) has ever taken place in their absence or ever will. ( Rudd V Secretary of State for Trade and Industry) Rudd Defence should be the automatic, recourse reflex defence of everyone who has been subjected to what amounts an act of enforcement barbarism carried out on behalf of the BBC by BBC TV Licensing contractor Capita.
Dear Tyrone Armatage
Thank you for your request for information under the Freedom of
Information Act 2000, as detailed in your email. Your request was received
on 12/01/2018. We will deal with your request as promptly as possible,
and at the latest within 20 working days. If you have any queries about
your request, please contact us at the address below.
The reference number for your request is RFI20180066.
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Information Rights
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Please find attached the response to your request for information,
reference RFI20180066.
Yours sincerely
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Karin Mabberley left an annotation ()
I've also made an attempt to get information similar to this but without the hypothetical scenarios.
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/s...
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Peter Jones left an annotation ()
As I think you probably realise, they will not respond to this. They will say that they are not required to create new information for the purposes of providing a response. Unless they actually catch a person red-handed in the act of receiving TV programmes, there are several valid defences that could be offered. You might find this article of use:
http://tv-licensing.blogspot.co.uk/2017/...
Of course it is not in the BBC's financial interests to clarify points of legislation. It prefers people to just absorb everything it claims.