TfL helps secure three year ASBO for prolific offender
6 May 2014 03:43 PM
Strong collaboration
between London Underground’s (LU’s) Network Enforcement Department
and the British Transport Police has resulted in a three year anti-social
behaviour order (ASBO) against a prolific offender who repeatedly fare evaded
and caused harassment, alarm and distress to staff at Gants Hill station
throughout 2013.
Naimul Hoque, aged 21,
from Ilford, was sentenced at Snaresbrook Crown Court, on Wednesday 23 April,
to 11 months jail for affray and assault on a Police Constable and given a
further one-month jail term for common assault and fare
evasion.
These sentences were suspended
for 18 months and he was given a six-month curfew order - between 8pm and 6am
– and ordered to undergo supervised treatment for alcohol. He was also
given a three-year ASBO, banning him from all London Underground stations
unless he is in possession of a valid ticket.
The ASBO also bans him from all
LU stations when he is under the influence of alcohol.
Hoque was arrested on Thursday 5
September 2013, after he entered Gants Hill station and approached a Customer
Service Adviser at the gate-line, who had his back turned at the
time.
Hoque then viciously poked the
member of staff inthe back before pushing through the ticket gates to go down
to the platforms.
The matter was reported to the
British Transport Police and Hoque pleaded guilty to common assault and fare
evasion at Romford Magistrates’ Court in December.
He was later sentenced for these
offences and for entirely separate offences of affray and assault on a police
constable, at Snaresbrook Crown Court.
Hoque caused such a nuisance at
Gants Hill station during 2013 that LU’s enforcement team gathered 91
separate statements from LU staff witnesses about his
behaviour.
These statements were then
passed on to the British Transport Police to enable them to secure the ASBO.
Aidan Harris, London Underground
Manager of the Workplace Violence Unit, said:
“We will not tolerate any
form of abuse against our staff who have the right to carry out their work
duties without fear. Hoque was a constant threat to our staff, exposing them to
over nine-months of abuse. We welcome the result of his sentencing and hope
this sends out a clear message that we will continue to work closely with our
policing partners to provide a safe working environment for staff and our
customers.”
TfL will be re-launching their
marketing poster campaign on workplace violence and the damage it can cause
across the transport network this month. This will focus on reducing abuse to
staff by encouraging customers to think more about some of their
behaviours.
- London Underground’s
Network Enforcement Department comprises of Revenue Control, Revenue
Prosecutions, Tactical Deployment and the Stations Requirements Team. They
provide reassurance to customers, staff and tenants who are affected by
anti-social behaviour. The team also enforce TfL’s Zip Card behaviour
policy, work with the British Transport Police in order to obtain anti-social
behaviour orders and undertake their own prosecutions for persistent nuisance
offenders at stations
- Across the transport
network, there are more than 2,500 police officers and Police Community
Support Officers (PCSOs) who, along with the deployment of more than 12,000
CCTV cameras on the Tube and CCTV on all London Buses, have helped to secure
successful convictions against around 90 per cent of offenders taken to court
for abusing staff on TfL’s networks in the last seven
years
- In another incident Mihai Cretu,
32, from Tottenham, was sentenced on 16 April, at Westminster
Magistrates’ Court, to a one-year Community Order - which included
a four-week curfew requirement enforced through electronic tagging, having
already pleaded guilty to assaulting a female Tube worker at Seven
Sisters station in January