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Barrister Peter Barnett sentenced for two-year fare dodge Barrister Peter Barnett sentenced for two-year fare dodge
(35 minutes later)
A barrister who commuted by train for two years without paying has been given a suspended 16-week prison sentence.A barrister who commuted by train for two years without paying has been given a suspended 16-week prison sentence.
Peter Barnett, 43, travelled from Haddenham & Thame Parkway to London Marylebone, costing operator Chiltern Railways about £6,000. Peter Barnett, 44, travelled from Haddenham and Thame Parkway to London Marylebone, but dodged the full fare by claiming his journey began at Wembley in north-west London.
He dodged the full fare by claiming his journey had begun at Wembley in north-west London. Chiltern Railways had argued he should pay back nearly £20,000 but the defence said the true value was £6,000.
Barnett, from Oxford, admitted six counts of fraud by false representation between April 2012 and November 2014. Barnett, from Oxford, admitted fraud by false representation.
Lost revenue 'Acted badly'
However, City of London Magistrates' Court ruled he had cost Chiltern Railways about £6,000 in lost revenue and not the £19,000 the company had claimed. Deputy District Judge Olalekan Omotosho said: "There is a need not just to punish you for the offences but also deter others from committing offences."
Barnett was caught when he was stopped by a ticket inspector at Marylebone and claimed to have travelled from Wembley instead of Haddenham and Thame Parkway in Oxfordshire. She added: "It remains unclear why you acted so badly.
He ran off when a member of station staff became suspicious about his story and called a supervisor, but had a change of heart and later handed himself in. "You let yourself down and your family down, particularly in light of your profession as a lawyer."
Barnett admitted six counts of fraud by false representation between April 2012 and November 2014 and was ordered to pay back nearly £6,000.
City of London Magistrates' Court heard that Barnett - a former Oxford graduate and Rhodes scholar who also worked in the financial services sector - failed to pay for journeys on Chiltern Railways on 655 days between April 2012 and November 2014.
'Penalty imposed'
He was thought to have simply "tapped out" with an Oyster card, automatically being charged the maximum Transport for London fare.
Prosecutors had argued he should pay back £19,689, the full value of the cost of daily returns for the trips he made.
However, the defence claimed the value was a penalty imposed by the railway company rather than the true value, because if Barnett had bought a ticket it would have been a weekly one - rather than paying a daily fare.
The court heard that Barnett ran off when a member of station staff became suspicious about his story and called a supervisor, but had a change of heart and later handed himself in.
During an interview with British Transport Police, he confessed that he had been carrying out the scam since April 2012.During an interview with British Transport Police, he confessed that he had been carrying out the scam since April 2012.
He is thought to have been boarding trains at Haddenham and Thame Parkway without a ticket, and then getting off at Marylebone by simply "tapping out" with an Oyster card, automatically being charged the maximum Transport for London fare. Barnett was also ordered to carry out 200 hours of unpaid work and be supervised for 12 months.