ChatterBank3 mins ago
notice of intended prosecution
today I have received a 'notice of intended prosecution' for driving through a red light. However, the date stated is 11 August and I did not buy the car until 2 Sepember. I have the receipt from the dealer and the change of owner document with the relevant dates on. My question is why have I got this and not the keeper at the time of the offence? I have never had anything like this before and it has really worried me. I can prove I was at work at the time.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by nanscamp. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's obviously a foul up, so don't worry.
NIPs are supposed to be lobbed out by the system within 14 days of the offence. In this case, it seems likely it went to clearly went to the intermediary organisation who was the registered keeper at the time - the dealer. The idiot probably responded by saying he'd sold the car to you.
Then the DVLA lob the NIP out your way.
That's my guess as to how it has happened.
NIPs are supposed to be lobbed out by the system within 14 days of the offence. In this case, it seems likely it went to clearly went to the intermediary organisation who was the registered keeper at the time - the dealer. The idiot probably responded by saying he'd sold the car to you.
Then the DVLA lob the NIP out your way.
That's my guess as to how it has happened.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
I once got an NIP for driving at 97mph in a 70mph in Cambridgeshire. Although the registration was mine, it wasn't my make/model of car, I was at work on the date in question and I don't recall ever going to Cambridgeshire. I rang up, worried that my plates had been cloned, but the lady explained that the registrations are manually taken from the photos and mistakes happen. I returned the letter and heard nothing more.