Note also that the Times reports includes the following from the court case
Earlier Kevin Jones, representing Merseyrail, told the court that, as a train inspector approached Miss Jennings, she took her flip-flops off the seat. He admitted there was no verbal warning but said that a notice in front of her warned passengers of a ?100 penalty for resting their feet on seats.
So they admit they did not caution her, they did not enforce their own notice but went into court. stupid and ultimately expensive for the tax payer.
That simply means that that they both committed indiscretions. The fact that they chose an inappropriate route for redress does not alter the circumstances of her guilt in the slightest.
Further, as she admitted committing an act which carried a ?100 penalty and that she was aware of that fact, then she should have been convicted and fined at least ?100. Any other result is a travesty of justice. Frankly, I don't see how anyone can be let off after admitting their guilt.
I didn't pay it too much attention but I understood the conviction was the issue not the fine anyway. As far as I am concerned it is seeding the rot that we are experiencing in declining standards. If we must argue the ethics of every case and invoke proportional justice in every case then we can be prepared for so-called 'jobsworths' not to risk the flak of sticking their necks out in actually doing anything. First the thugs get let off because we are afraid of them, then the blacks are being let off because we are picking on them, then the Muslims are being let off because we don't understand them and now pretty girls get let off because they have career prospects. At this rate it'll only be idiots and white Caucasians left to answer charges.
Her prospective career was irrelevant to the offence in the same way as a budding race driver's career would be when facing conviction for drink / driving. Different magnitudes agreed, but the principle it still the same. She should have thought of that before deciding to flout the law.
Trivial it may be, but the principle of mindset is constant - if she knew she was doing wrong and she didn't want to stand the consequences - then she shouldn't have done it. And on that fundamental point of consistent law enforcement the Magistrate got it wrong, it is not within the remit of a Magistrate to dictate what cases are presented to a Court.
A Magistrate's Court is empowered to try the trivial end of the scale anyway in the groupings of misdemeanour's and offences only. Felonies are to be committed to a higher court. A civil magistrate has a sworn duty to try fairly without fear or favour and cases where a person is presented to a court to answer a lawful charge. Their sole duty on the bench is to determine guilt or innocence and certainly not to evaluate the merits of cases presented to them for decision.
Although I (admittedly) am banging on about it I would say for the record that I am equally upset about the lenient sentencing handed down in serious cases, it is equally bad. The point is consistency, If she was guilty then she should have been convicted, the due sentence is a matter of debate but should have been no less than the ?100 that she was forewarned by notice about.
There is far too much of this 'exceptional justice', ultimately it is not fair and it is not equitable to anyone in the long run. Justice is meant to be blind. the sooner we get back to that state the better.