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Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by Fredbargate
(Post 9788258)
You would think that a university student would have enough common sense to either see he was sold the wrong ticket or at least be fluent enough to explain clearly the problem to the conductor.
Regardless of whether he made a mistake or was deliberately avoiding paying for a ticket, he boarded the train at a station where he had the opportunity to purchase a valid ticket and failed to do so. He was in the wrong. Everyone's else's actions, whether right or wrong, would have been avoided had he sorted it out before boarding the FIRST train. Maybe he bought two tickets for the first train for him and a second person to travel? |
Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by Mitzyboy
(Post 9786952)
That would be about typical if he was prosecuted. Some idiot refuses to pay, gets his just deserts, and the good guy gets stuffed
Ah well |
Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by rugbymatt
(Post 9788898)
Swarthy bastard!
Ladies and gentleman, we have been kettled.:D |
Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by Lion in Winter
(Post 9790098)
This is clearly a containment tactic for all us swarthy bastards. Keep all the foreigners from other parts of the forum who ask difficult questions in Spain's own little TIO.
Ladies and gentleman, we have been kettled.:D I was actually quite looking forward to the visits, but it's all been a bit of an anticlimax really :) |
Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
One other thing that struck me about the clip - the ticket collector looked a bit old to me to be in a job where he might be called upon to confront potentially yobbish behaviour. How are the poor old sods who might have to carry on doing such jobs until they are 67 in the not too distant future going to cope?
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Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by Lynn R
(Post 9790875)
One other thing that struck me about the clip - the ticket collector looked a bit old to me to be in a job where he might be called upon to confront potentially yobbish behaviour. How are the poor old sods who might have to carry on doing such jobs until they are 67 in the not too distant future going to cope?
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Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by positive pam
(Post 9790886)
Think you can confront yobbish behaviour without resorting to violence and it doesn't depend on age. Somtimes older and wiser does it ay? :nod:
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Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by Lion in Winter
(Post 9790098)
This is clearly a containment tactic for all us swarthy bastards. Keep all the foreigners from other parts of the forum who ask difficult questions in Spain's own little TIO.
Ladies and gentleman, we have been kettled.:D |
Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by Lynn R
(Post 9790897)
I didn't mean that the ticket collector would be the one to resort to violence - do you really think most of the feral chavs he might come up against would respond well to sweet reason? They are more likely to set upon an older, more vulnerable person that a younger, fitter one who might not be such an easy target.
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Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by mikelincs
(Post 9790037)
He's claiming he was injured. Had I been in the situation the guy was, then in the current climate of suing anyone for anything I just wouldn't have got involved, I think, given the fact that it was filmed and put onto YouTube, then he is very likely to face criminal prosecution for assault, if the lad who was thrown off wants to go that route. It should have been left to the ticket chappie to deal with.
He could even have taken it a step further by hanging on to him, calling the cops and claiming citizens arrest. I doubt he would then have been subject to prosecution, or if he was then the law is an even bigger ass than I thought. |
Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Latest on this seems to imply Trouble for the ticket inspector, and the man who threw the fare dodger off the train. Police are involved, both rail and normal.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...end-court.html |
Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
I heard of an even more disturbing incident on the radio this morning where a ticket collector had told two youths to get off a train and one of them had returned and stabbed him (this was in East Tilbury, it said). Bet he would have been glad of a burly passenger to come to his aid, but maybe they were all too scared to intervene after the backlash the Scottish guy got.
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Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by Lynn R
(Post 9793895)
I heard of an even more disturbing incident on the radio this morning where a ticket collector had told two youths to get off a train and one of them had returned and stabbed him (this was in East Tilbury, it said). Bet he would have been glad of a burly passenger to come to his aid, but maybe they were all too scared to intervene after the backlash the Scottish guy got.
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/ticket-insp...090948214.html |
Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by Lynn R
(Post 9793895)
I heard of an even more disturbing incident on the radio this morning where a ticket collector had told two youths to get off a train and one of them had returned and stabbed him (this was in East Tilbury, it said). Bet he would have been glad of a burly passenger to come to his aid, but maybe they were all too scared to intervene after the backlash the Scottish guy got.
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Re: One for the do gooders to jump on
Originally Posted by John & Kath
(Post 9795547)
In the back no less what is the world coming to.
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