With his rubbish collected only once a fortnight, Gareth
Corkhill's wheelie bin was so full the lid wouldn't shut.
And for that, the father of four finds himself with a criminal
record.
Magistrates convicted the 26-year-old bus driver after hearing
evidence that the lid was four inches ajar, which is against
rules to stop bins overflowing.
He was ordered to pay £210 - a week's wages - after
he declined to pay an on-the-spot fine imposed by the local
council's bin police, who visited him wearing stab-proof vests
and carrying photographic evidence of his crime.
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To add insult to injury he was told to pay a £15 victim
surcharge to help victims of violence - despite there being
no victim - and threatened with prison if he failed to pay.
Rapists, murderers and other violent criminals who have earned
a jail sentence rather than a fine are immune from the penalty.
Yesterday the council, Copeland in Cumbria, said that Mr
Corkhill's family had caused problems for "the battle
to reduce waste".
His penalty compares with the typical on-the-spot fine of
£80 given to shoplifters - even repeat offenders.
Full
article here.