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Jamie Thompson wrote:
On 17 Oct, 08:35, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 22:34:06 on Thu, 16 Oct 2008, tim..... remarked: You're going to have to come up with a convincing reason why you "just happened" to have someone else's freedom pass in you pocket in the first place. Personally, I can't think of a reason I would believe if I were the jury Depends who the Freedom Pass belonged to, and why he had it. If it was his wife's and had picked it up from the council office that day, and was in the process of taking it home - then the possession would be understandable (even if the accidental nature of the use might be a more difficult thing to explain). -- Roland Perry Are freedom passes oyster cards? - If so, then if you had one in your wallet along with your normal Oyster (as suggested, say you were picking it up or it just happened to be in a pile with the rest of your normal credit cards et al. that morning etc.) and the barrier reader found it before your oyster and used it instead....these are contactless cards that live out of sight, after all. Does anyone know what happens if you have multiple oysters next to each other when you swipe? Been there, done it. I have a freedom pass & a oyster card (for use before 9am) Not thinking I had them both in my wallet, I later found that the oyster had been debited (no way of telling if the Freedom Pass had been scanned) -- Tony the Dragon |
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