Surely, if there's no evidence, as the cigarette has gone, and no CCTV, it's your word against the warden's? They are only civilians in effect. I can't see how you could lose an appeal, if you deny the offence ever happened.
Hope you got a receipt otherwise the £75 probably just went straight into the pocket of the person who fined you.
The firm is not paid but takes two-thirds of the fines they issue.
After their first six months of operation The Argus revealed the firm had issued 480 fines to smokers but only five for littering.
Quelle surprise.
Edit. Doesn't two-thirds written look less than a written 66.66%.....
A small issue compared to the madness of puffing away at cancer sticks. I recently lost another relative, in his mid 50’s, to smoking related cancer.
As a smoker you know the risk, even if you ignore them. What I find so unjust is people who develop lung cancer who have never smoked. I know of two who have passed on and one who is hanging on. As a mostly life long smoker, who has given up on numerous occasions for years at a time and currently not smoking I almost feel guilty that my non smoking friends had/have lung cancer. Apologies I have gone way off topic but your post brought it all back.
That is incorrect, the law is clear under the environmental Protection Act 1990, section 87, offence of leaving litter.
(1)A person is guilty of an offence if he throws down, drops or otherwise deposits any litter in any place to which this section applies and leaves it
And the guidance says you should warn them of a fine if they don't go back and pick it up, not fine them as soon as they take a step away, but the law allows that.
Can you show me what section of the environmental Protection Act 1990 states that if you take a step away you can be issued a fpn?