Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Eamonn Farrell/Photocall Ireland

Fines totalling almost €100k in court crackdown on M50 toll dodgers

None of the motorists who were summonsed came to court.

TEN MOTORISTS ACCUSED of dodging M50 tolls were hit with fines totaling almost €100,000 yesterday.

The penalties ranging from €3,000 to €22,000 were handed down by Judge Anthony Halpin at Dublin District Court.

One motorist who allegedly used Ireland’s busiest motorway 800 times without paying had a bench warrant issued for his arrest after he failed to turn up to for his trial. He is contesting his case and has instructed a solicitor to defend him.

In all the prosecutions which resulted in the €97,000 in fines imposed, none of the motorists who had been summonsed came to court. Cases against them went ahead in their absence.

Judge Halpin imposed smaller fines on some motorists who made efforts to pay their tolls but said, “The people who disregard it totally are fined heaviest, they have no regard whatsoever”.

In one case he adjourned he granted legal aid and said this was due to the seriousness of the offence.

The barrier-free toll motorway is operated by Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII).

The judge said the authority was in charge of maintaining the roads and he warned: “If people want to use certain roads they have to pay; if they don’t, the penalties are quite high”.

Each case finalised yesterday featured five sample counts and photo evidence of how many times the defendants’ vehicles had been detected using the motorway without paying the charge.

The court heard the prosecution evidence showed the passage of the vehicles, mostly private cars, on the motorway on dates in May, August, October and November 2018, as well as proof of vehicle ownership at the time.

Vehicle owners were given six months to pay the fines as well up to €350 in prosecution costs.

Prosecuting counsel Thomas Rice BL (instructed by Pierse Fitzgibbon Solicitors) said a TII official had certificates of ownership as well as images of the vehicles passing the toll gantry on the M50.

The court can impose fines of up to €5,000 per charge as well as a sentence of up to six months.

1,300 letters

Nicole Spellman, of 19 Kilcarrig Green, Fettercairn, Tallaght, Dublin was fined €22,000, the highest amount in the list of cases.

The judge heard she was sent about 1,300 letters in relation to 446 unpaid M50 tolls and there were no payments.

Adrian Frandes, trading as Roomheat, with an address at 12 Whitechurch Close, Rathfarnham, Dublin 16 was fined €3,000. The court heard the TII would have sent him just over 600 letters about the unpaid charges. His vehicle had a history of 174 passages with no payment received.

Oleg Gherman, of 63 Innisfree, Stepaside Lane, Sandyford, Dublin, had a car with history of 156 trips on the M50 with three payments, the last being on 31 July.

Judge Halpin heard this defendant would have been contacted by post 450 times by TII. He received fines totalling €5,000.

Ronan Rattigan of 2 Templeview Avenue, Clarehall, Dublin 13 was fined €10,000 for his five sample counts. The court was told his vehicle had a history of 141 passages and no payments.

Elena Ershova, with an address at The Lodge House, Killucan, Co. Westmeathwas given €5,000 in fines. Her car had a history of 165 trips on the motorway with three payments and she was issued close to 500 letters.

Marek Cornaga, of 75 Armagh Court, Waterville, Blanchardstown, Dublin, was also fined €5,000. The court heard his car had done 177 trips on the M50 and there were six payments. He would have received just under 500 letters about the tolls, the court heard.

Mark Kealy of 13 Drumcairn Drive, Fettercairn, Tallaght, Dublin was fined €14,000. His car had a history of 198 journeys on the M50 and no payments. The judge was told the defendant would have been sent approximately 600 letters.

James Gallagher, with an address at 145 Church Hill, Tullamore, Co. Offaly, was the owner of a goods vehicle with a history of 447 trips on the M50 but no payments were received despite being sent 1,300 letters, the court heard. Judge Halpin ordered him to pay €19,000 in fines.

Lynn McLoughlin with an address at 3564 Lakeside Park, Newbridge, Co. Kildarewas fined €5,000 over five unpaid tolls in September and October. The court heard since she became the owner, her car had a history of 170 passages with six payments.

Legal proceedings

Finally, Ted Purman, with an address at 31 Longdale Terrace, Ballymun, Dublin was fined €9,000. Judge Halpin was told this man’s car had done 258 trips on the motorway but no tolls were paid even though he was sent 750 letters.

The court has heard it was TII’s policy to negotiate with defendants and some cases on the list were adjourned. 

The registered owner of a vehicle is responsible even if they were not driving the vehicle.

The standard M50 toll for an unregistered private car is €3.10 must be paid before 8pm the following day or else there is a €3.00 penalty for having missed the deadline.

Motorists have 14 days from the date of issue to pay for the journey and the initial penalty; otherwise a further penalty of €41 is applied.

After a further 56 days there is an additional penalty charge of €103 and if it remains unpaid legal proceedings follow with the possibility of a court fine of up to €5,000 as well as a jail term of six-months, or both, per offence.

Author
View 73 comments
Close
73 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Darren Skelton
    Favourite Darren Skelton
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 9:43 AM

    Coming soon – Aldi OS

    105
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Alan Murphy
    Favourite Alan Murphy
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 7:13 PM

    Obviously to be followed the week after by the Lidl one

    11
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute MK
    Favourite MK
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 9:37 AM

    Would the windows os smartphones not be the third and Firefox the fourth?

    65
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Bilbo Baggins
    Favourite Bilbo Baggins
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 11:58 AM

    They.have blackberry and now tizen to deal with too.

    10
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute LeeKelly
    Favourite LeeKelly
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 12:46 PM

    LOL Microsoft mobile products. That’s a good one. Its already dead in the water along with Nokia who is flogging them. They’ve recently indicated they’re ready to make android phones in the near future and to prevent its total destruction and no amount of cash MS throws at then will make or worth their while.

    28
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Eric Chubb
    Favourite Eric Chubb
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 10:09 AM

    I don’t see what niche Firefox OS is going to service. Their browser has been hemorrhaging users to Chrome for years, and iOS and Android are mature systems which are meeting most users needs. Another OS is just another headache for developers and users.

    42
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute stoner1916
    Favourite stoner1916
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 10:31 AM

    I have to agree with Eric here, i think they’ll struggle, android is already more or less free to use, Apple has it’s market. if these guys have a few good ideas they will just be copied by the others. Android became established because they were up against an established closed expensive opposition, they came in with the concept of being free, someone else now has to compete with two established companies the slick apple designs and the open free androids.
    What’s the Firefox edge?

    25
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dot Arse
    Favourite Dot Arse
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 10:06 AM

    While OpenSource is great and all, the reality is constantly full of bugs – FireFox browser is one of the most resource heavy applications you can run

    24
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Daniel Doran
    Favourite Daniel Doran
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 10:28 AM

    Agreed, the Android SDK feels like it’s being held together with duct tape.

    11
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Barry O'Brien
    Favourite Barry O'Brien
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 4:50 PM

    You’re talking crap. If open source is so buggy then linux wouldn’t be powering 70% or more of the worlds servers. I could go on and on with examples of the crap you are talking but I think my first point illustrates it nicely.

    12
    See 1 more reply ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dot Arse
    Favourite Dot Arse
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 9:06 PM

    Conor, I was referring to FireFox and it’s browser with its countless bugs, not Linux which I am fully aware of

    http://m.threatpost.com/en_us/blogs/firefox-18-brings-21-updates-fixes-nearly-3000-bugs-010913

    4
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute David Kelly
    Favourite David Kelly
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 12:08 PM

    They’re really coming to the market *very* late. When you consider that even the mobile industry giant that is Nokia struggled (and ultimately failed) to get their next generation Maemo / Meego smartphone OS to market and even Windows Mobile 8 isn’t getting all that much traction so far, you’d have to wonder if there’s space for yet another mobile OS ?

    To me, it looks like Android is becoming to the mobile/tablet world what Windows is to the desktop world i.e. the de facto OS. It already has 68.4% of the global market!!

    Apple’s iOS is occupying a similar (but bigger) space to the Mac OS for laptops/desktops i.e. a very respectable market share of almost 20% of the global market, but a closed Apple-only hardware-software solution that occupies a chunk of the market at the high end. With that kind of chunk of the market, at the top end, and controlling the hardware, software and ecosystem (App Store). That still makes Apple an absolutely hugely profitable, runaway success.

    Blackberry’s rather niche and business-focused and fighting to stay relevant while Windows Mobile is still to prove itself as a main stream mobile OS. It may well do this year, but the jury’s still out.

    Personally, I just can’t see where Firefox’s Mobile OS would find a foothold in the market! It could be a great OS, but it would still have to sign up handset makers and create a massive ecosystem of developers to build apps before it would be even in the same league as Blackberry and Windows Mobile. Getting into the Google / Apple league would be a rather amazing feat if they ever achieved it!

    I don’t think it’s much of a challenge to Google or Apple to be perfectly honest.

    23
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Jason Culligan
    Favourite Jason Culligan
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 2:04 PM

    There is always a market, especially in one as competitive as the mobile phone market. The problem is you need to offer something unique that sets your product apart. iOS has simplicity, Android has customisation and Blackberry’s OS is marketed as a business solution.

    Microsoft didn’t offer anything new to set it apart other than the name. What will this offer? If it does bring something new it will find traction but if it doesn’t it will be dead in the water.

    5
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute random
    Favourite random
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 9:41 AM

    I guess you’re not anybody these days unless you have a mobile operating system.

    18
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Conor Murphy
    Favourite Conor Murphy
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 10:08 AM

    Its not going to be here 2013. Thus is firmly a third world is for this year. Cheap and cheerful, wil probably be really successful at that

    7
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Damien
    Favourite Damien
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 3:31 PM

    Android, iOS, Blackberry, Windows Mobile are the big 4.
    Now it seems everyone and their mother are making operating systems for phones: Firefox, Ubuntu, Samsung Tizen. Symbian and bada are still alive somewhere.

    More OS’ means more time developers take to make apps for each platform which in turn means slower updates, more bugs and less stable.

    4
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute random
    Favourite random
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 9:51 AM

    Probably means the browser…

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute random
    Favourite random
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 9:54 AM

    Uh, reply to Partysaurus this was.

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Henry Shields
    Favourite Henry Shields
    Report
    Feb 25th 2013, 1:24 PM

    Mybe if they went with decent manufacturers they might have a chance but generally ZTE LG and Heuwei don’t make great handsets. This is talking from experience.

    1
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

Leave a commentcancel

 
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds