Saturday, 15 December 2012

Nasty Employer, Nasty Employees, Nasty Employment


Just when we'd thought that Capita Business Services operation of the BBC TV Licensing contract couldn't be nastier, seemingly it does. Apparently the Capita Business Services employee concerned is no longer employed by them. Little wonder, judging from the images and video in the latest TV Licensing Blogspot blogpost of the following incident in Hartlepool in October 2012.

Fellow anti-TV Licensing blogger, TV Licensing Blogspot spot has published this blogpost relating a particularly nasty attempt to gain entry into a dwelling against the wishes of the lone female occupant caring for a child. Once again the value of domestic cctv and video surveillance proves invaluable in gathering evidence of the serial abuses and misdemeanours perpetrated by employees of Capita Business Services under cover of the BBC TV Licensing contract. TV Licensing Watch advise anybody who has the misfortune to have face to face dealings with Capita Business Services TV Licensing to make an audio-visual record with handheld video cameras of those dealings in their entirety.

Although the door has clearly been fully closed by the lone female occupant, Capita TV Licensing employee claimed his foot was trapped in the door. If that were really the case, his foot should not have even been there obstructing the door. Which he would have realised had he bothered to read and obey TV Licensing's own Visiting Procedures Manual. If he was prepared to lie about that, what else was he prepared to lie about in the course of his employment by Capita Business Services TV Licensing? In particular, in connection with the taking of TVL178 Prosecution Statements which are used in prosecutions brought in Magistrates Courts for broadcast receiving licence "evasion". If there is any justice, every TVL178 Prosecution Statement taken by this particular Capita Business Services TV Licensing miscreant should be examined and every resulting prosecution withdrawn retrospectively.

The Police decided not to take any further action in connection with this particularly unpleasant incident. The Police then wonder why they are so little respected and so readily despised. Regular readers of this blog will be aware of an earlier blog posted here relating to Cheshire Constabulary and their repeated mention in a Freedom of Information "response" of a so-called "partnership against crime" with the BBC and BBC TV Licensing field operations contractors such as Capita Business Services.

With "partners against crime" like the Jimmy Savile sex crimes scandal-hit BBC and intimidation and violence meted out by field operations employees of Capita Business Services TV Licensing, Cheshire Constabulary and other police forces and constabularies across the UK seem to have an uncanny predisposition and ability to pick wrong 'uns to go into "partnership" with. It seems to us at TV Licensing Watch that with "partners against crime" like the BBC and Capita Business Services TV Licensing, police forces and constabularies don't seem to need criminals and criminal gangs to police. Which of course raises doubts and questions about whether such "partnerships" between such disparate public and private entities should even exist. Such "partnerships" seem to us at TV Licensing Watch to inevitably lead to those who purportedly serve the public to targetting the public they purportedly serve in the name of "enforcement".

Capita Business Services TV Licensing is a private company and its employees are not oath sworn officers of the law.

They do not have police powers.
They do not have automatic powers of entry.
People are under absolutely no obligation to cooperate with them.

"TV Licensing Laid Bare", available as a free download from TV Licensing Blogspot, is perhaps the best reference work there is about the BBC and its TV Licensing scam. If you have not yet downloaded a copy we at TV Licensing Watch urge you to do so at the earliest opportunity.

The value of domestic cctv surveillance and handheld video camera can prove invaluable in gathering evidence of the serial abuses and misdemeanours perpetrated by employees of Capita Business Services under cover of the BBC TV Licensing™ contract. TV Licensing Watch advise anybody who has the misfortune to have face to face dealings with Capita Business Services TV Licensing™ to make an audio-visual record of those dealings in their entirety covertly or overtly with cctv and handheld video cameras.

For people who have not exercised their right to remain silent, TV Licensing Watch advise anybody who has had the misfortune to have face to face dealings with Capita Business Services TV Licensing™ and have received a summons as a consequence to contact a licensed law practitioner if: there is the slightest discrepancy between the actual situation regarding viewing habits and/or what actually happened during the interview compared with what has been written on the TVL178 Record of Interview self incrimination form.




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